• Am J Phys Med Rehabil · Aug 2020

    Paucity of Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Rehabilitation of Burn Survivors.

    • Lynn H Gerber, Rati Deshpande, Shruthi Prabhakar, Cindy Cai, Steven Garfinkel, J Mary Louise Pomeroy, Peter Esselman, and Jeffrey Schneider.
    • From the Center for the Study of Chronic Illness and Disability, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia (LHG, SP, JMLP); Beatty Center for Study of Liver Disease, Department of Medicine, Inova Health System, Falls Church, Virginia (LHG, RD); American Institutes for Research, Arlington, Virginia (CC); American Institutes for Research, Chapel Hill, North Carolina (SG); Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington (PE); and Department of Rehabilitation, Spaulding Hospital, Charlestown, Massachusetts (JS).
    • Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2020 Aug 1; 99 (8): 739-751.

    AbstractClinical practice guidelines (CPGs) provide an efficient route from research to practice because they follow a prescribed, vetted process for evidence collection. CPGs offer underserved fields, such as burn rehabilitation, an accessible approach to reliable treatment. A literature search was performed using the terms "Burns AND CPGs AND Rehabilitation." Three reviewers determined whether guideline development followed an established vetting process. "Rehabilitation" required evidence of treatment to improve, maintain, or restore human function and provide treatment to facilitate recovery. Only 160 articles were obtained and, after adding the term "functional outcome," 62 remained for full-text review, of which 21 were eligible. When articles were scored for inclusion of both rehabilitation AND function or functional outcome AND guideline vetting, seven articles remained. One was community based. Nine articles had no recorded vetting process but addressed rehabilitation as an outcome. There is a paucity of CPGs relevant to clinical rehabilitation for burn survivors, likely a result of very few published intervention trials, rare randomized controlled trials addressing rehabilitation, absence of data to establish an evidence base for practice recommendations, an inadequate number of community-based intervention trials, and little patient input. It is likely that rehabilitation of burn survivors will improve if more people gain skills in meeting the needs of people with burn injury. An increase in trained professionals may lead to an increase in intervention trials and research to establish evidence for CPGs. People engaged in burn research have an opportunity to devise a systematic, generally agreed-upon approach toward evaluating burn patients and treatment outcomes that will permit data sharing across the world and assess patients throughout the acute and chronic phases of burn injury.

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