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Physical rehabilitation in Brazilian pediatric intensive care units: a multicenter point prevalence study.

Authors :
Redivo J
Kannan H
Souza AAF
Colleti Junior J
Kudchadkar SR
Horigoshi NK
Costa GA
Castilho TRR
Peron PPD
Scaranto WP
Medeiros DNM
Matsumoto T
Almeida CG
Oliveira FRC
Brandão MB
Lima-Setta F
Prata-Barbosa A
Xavier GN
Andrade LB
Aguiar AU
Coutinho MPG
Castro REV
Landy GA
Balaniuc SLB
Yamaguchi RS
Source :
Critical care science [Crit Care Sci] 2023 Dec 22; Vol. 35 (3), pp. 290-301. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Dec 22 (Print Publication: 2023).
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objective: To determine the prevalence and factors associated with the physical rehabilitation of critically ill children in Brazilian pediatric intensive care units.<br />Methods: A 2-day, cross-sectional, multicenter point prevalence study comprising 27 pediatric intensive care units (out of 738) was conducted in Brazil in April and June 2019. This Brazilian study was part of a large multinational study called Prevalence of Acute Rehabilitation for Kids in the PICU (PARK-PICU). The primary outcome was the prevalence of mobility provided by physical therapy or occupational therapy. Clinical data on patient mobility, potential mobility safety events, and mobilization barriers were prospectively collected in patients admitted for ≥ 72 hours.<br />Results: Children under the age of 3 years comprised 68% of the patient population. The prevalence of therapist-provided mobility was 74%, or 277 out of the 375 patient-days. Out-of-bed mobility was most positively associated with family presence (adjusted odds ratios 3.31;95%CI 1.70 - 6.43) and most negatively associated with arterial lines (adjusted odds ratios 0.16; 95%CI 0.05 - 0.57). Barriers to mobilization were reported on 27% of patient-days, the most common being lack of physician order (n = 18). Potential safety events occurred in 3% of all mobilization events.<br />Conclusion: Therapist-provided mobility in Brazilian pediatric intensive care units is frequent. Family presence was high and positively associated with out-of-bed mobility. The presence of physiotherapists 24 hours a day in Brazilian pediatric intensive care units may have a substantial impact on the mobilization of critically ill children.

Details

Language :
English; Portuguese
ISSN :
2965-2774
Volume :
35
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Critical care science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38133159
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5935/2965-2774.20230388-en