An In-Depth Look At Post-Acute Brain Injury Rehabilitation
The rehabilitation supporting recovery from a brain injury happens in many stages. In the initial stage, families and treatment providers focus on urgent medical needs and work to establish basic functions like communicating and moving. These first rehabilitation goals emphasize the development of very basic skills and stabilization of medical adjustment. At some point, a person with a brain injury no longer requires the nursing support and constant vigilance of the medical hospital setting, but may not be ready to resume living at home with family, or manage the demands of community living without accommodations. This is the step for post-acute brain injury rehabilitation.
In other cases, a person may have been successful at one style of living, such as home with family, and are ready to make progress and learn new skills that allow them to take on new challenges, such as living in the community with some structured support. A post-acute brain injury rehabilitation program can help with these transitions as well.
Sojourners and East Lansing House, Hope Network Rehabilitation Services programs, are examples of such post-acute brain injury rehabilitation settings. Participants use the supervised support of a post-acute setting to make gains necessary for the passage from hospitalization to the community. A post-acute brain injury program can function as a place to establish a style of living that supports rehabilitation and recovery. While Hope Network's Grand Rapids and East Lansing facilities are licensed as Adult Foster Care homes, they serve as special training environments, where support for basic care needs are combined with specialized rehabilitation strategies and training in a supportive, therapeutic environment. Supervision, oversight, and the close involvement of interdisciplinary therapies are integrated in strategies developed around the specific needs of each resident. The setting, while not quite like home, is often experienced as a welcome change from the hospital, as the familiar routines of meals, self-care, productivity, leisure, and rest are reestablished. Gradually, residents are exposed to challenges, community activities, and therapeutic opportunities consistent with their goals.
Residents admitted to our inpatient post-acute brain injury rehabilitation programs can expect an initial period of extended evaluation and treatment, which typically lasts two weeks. During this time, goals supported from previous treatment are sustained and evaluation strategies allow development of new plans for the next phase of recovery and the development of a post-injury lifestyle. Residents and their families can expect to be included in an Evaluation Review meeting in this early stage of treatment to refine expectations and develop plans and treatment strategies that support a transition beyond the present challenges.