Die Rehabilitation
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Symptoms, Effects on Quality of Life, Judgement and Expectations of Treatment in Active Ankylosing Spondylitis: The Patient's View. In ankylosing spondylitis uncertainty prevails among rheumatologists on how to define and measure activity. In the present study the patient's view of activity was evaluated. ⋯ It was no surprise that pain and mobility restriction were cited most often by the patients. Breathing difficulties were cited rather often, whereas fatigue seems not to play an important role for most patients. The results suggest that modern rheumatology may have underestimated the relevance of difficult breathing and paid too much attention to fatigue.
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The article discusses the structural requirements on inpatient institutions for oncological rehabilitation and expresses the position of the German Cancer Society's Section for Rehabilitation, Aftercare and Social Medicine (ARNS). Standards are formulated concerning spatial conditions, technical equipment, personnel (number, professions, qualification) and networking conditions with regard to all cancer diagnoses. These standards are also discussed with regard to various specific cancer diagnoses such as, for example, breast cancer, gastrointestinal tumours, lung tumours and brain tumours, as well as with regard to patients in specific treatment measures such as bone marrow and stem cell transplantation.
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The article concerns itself with the issue of process quality in inpatient institutions for oncological rehabilitation and expresses the viewpoint of the German Cancer Society's Section for Rehabilitation, Aftercare and Social Medicine (ARNS). Standards for the organization of patients' access to the rehabilitation clinic, for the design of oncological-rehabilitational diagnostics, for the formation of therapeutic strategies and the rehabilitative services offered will be described.
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The article is concerned with the basic ideas of outcome quality within the field of oncological rehabilitation and expresses the position which is held by the Section for Rehabilitation, Aftercare and Social Medicine within the German Cancer Society. The authors explicitly express the necessity of rehabilitation-specific goals and corresponding outcome criteria as opposed to the goals and criteria of acute oncological treatment. In the formulation of goals and criteria, the medical-somatic, occupational-rehabilitative, social and psychological levels are considered. The consequences which arise from these outcome criteria with regard to the rehabilitative health care system for cancer patients are discussed.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
[Patient expectations regarding methods and outcomes of their rehabilitation--a controlled study of back pain- and cancer patients].
Although patient expectations are important factors of the success of rehabilitation, they have not yet received much attention in research. In the present cross-sectional study, n = 248 rehabilitation patients, n = 160 suffering from chronic back pain and n = 88 suffering from oncological diseases (breast cancer, cervical cancer, ovarian cancer, colorectal cancer), were assessed at the time of admission to a rehabilitation clinic, using a newly developed self-report questionnaire to evaluate their expectations regarding the process and outcome of their rehabilitation. Results show on an item level that non-specific process expectations such as balneophysical treatments or features of the surroundings of the clinic were most prevailing. ⋯ Those differences show that oncological patients had higher expectations than back pain patients. Patients' expectations were correlated with functional status and, to a lesser degree, emotional distress and locus of control. To conclude, our study demonstrated that medical condition, sociodemographic factors, working status and functional capacity are important determinants of patient expectations regarding the process and outcome of rehabilitation.