Rehab facilities preparing for COVID-19 crunch as more patients recover

Rehabilitation centres have undergone dramatic transformations over the past three months to accommodate patients recovering from COVID-19. An estimated one in 20 patients with COVID-19 require critical care during their illness and are likely to need extensive physical and pulmonary rehabilitation after the fact.

Rehab facilities have urgently increased their capacity, recognizing that many patients with COVID-19 may suffer serious problems long after they recover. They’ve partitioned beds for patients with active infections, secured extra personal protective equipment, paused in-person outpatient visits, and launched virtual rehab programs.

“Sometimes people think they get off a ventilator, they’re discharged from the intensive care unit, and then they go home. But it’s not that simple,” says Dr. Marla Beauchamp, an assistant professor in McMaster University’s physiotherapy program. “They probably can’t walk. They probably can’t stand up on their own. It will take a long time for these patients to get back to their baseline levels.”

Existing rehab programs may also need to be modified for patients with COVID-19. According to Dr. Chris Grant, a rehab specialist at Foothills Medical Centre in Calgary, rehab systems typically aren’t “well-geared” to care for an influx of patients with lung injuries. “Formal rehab has focused traditionally on brain injury, spinal cord injury, amputation, and a few other conditions. Big lung injuries usually aren’t on that list,” Grant says.

Patients recovering from COVID-19 will likely need individualized exercise programs to regain muscle strength and fitness after hospitalization, combined with pulmonary rehabilitation, focusing on specific breathing techniques to use the body’s oxygen more efficiently. Physical therapists providing these services may need to closely supervise patients and take extra precautions when working with patients with active infection.

According to Dr. Mark Bayley, medical program director at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, “there are a lot of moving parts here that we are still getting to understand.”

Some patients recovering from COVID-19 may require months of post-hospital care. At the same time, rehab facilities are still admitting their usual patients and accommodating patients who were discharged from hospitals to free up beds during the pandemic.

Preventing the spread of COVID-19 among these groups remains “the key challenge” for rehab facilities, says Bayley. The Toronto Rehabilitation Institute converted some programs to a virtual format, completing a transition in two weeks that Bayley says would typically take more than a year. The shift to telephone and online services reduced the risk of infection and freed some beds for patients from nearby hospitals. The centre also opened a 40-bed unit for people waiting for long-term care, and redeployed specialists who previously worked in outpatient programs to staff the unit.

In Calgary, Foothills Medical Centre’s rehab unit moved to a decommissioned hospital make space for patients with COVID-19. Grant says moving the unit involved “mind-blowing logistical work,” from putting in oxygen to setting up a pharmacy.

Meanwhile, on the west coast, Island Health in Victoria made a rapid transition to tele-rehab. According to rehabilitation medical director Dr. Paul Winston, the shift to virtual services has improved access for patients and will likely continue after the pandemic. Previously, some patients had to book appointments around their access to transportation. For example, “if you want to book an accessible van, it’s a two-week booking window,” Winston explains.

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