COVID-19 rehabilitation units are twice as expensive as regular rehabilitation units

Authors

  • Sandro Iannaccone
  • Federica Alemanno
  • Elise Houdayer
  • Luigia Brugliera
  • Paola Castellazzi
  • Domenico Cianflone
  • Carlo Meloni
  • Alberto Ambrosio
  • Pietro Mortini
  • Alfio Spina
  • Massimo Filippi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2704

Keywords:

COVID-19, rehabilitation, clinical organization, pandemic

Abstract

Objective: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused significant motor, cognitive, psychological, neurological and cardiological disabilities in many infected patients. Functional rehabilitation of infectious COVID-19 patients has been implemented in the acute care wards and in appropriate, ad hoc, multidisciplinary COVID-19 rehabilitation units. However, because COVID-19 rehabilitation units are a clinical novelty, clinical and organizational benchmarks are not yet available. The aim of this study is to describe the organizational needs and operational costs of such a unit, by comparing its activity, organization, and costs with 2 other functional rehabilitation units, in San Raffaele Hospital, Milan, Italy. Methods: The 2-month activity of the COVID-19 Rehabilitation Unit at San Raffaele Hospital, Milan, Italy, which was created in response to the emergency need for rehabilitation of COVID-19 patients, was compared with the previous year?s activity of the Cardiac Rehabilitation and Motor Rehabilitation Units of the same institute. Results: The COVID-19 Rehabilitation Unit had the same number of care beds as the other units, but required twice the amount of staff and instrumental equipment, leading to a deficit in costs. Discussion: The COVID-19 Rehabilitation Unit was twice as expensive as the 2 other units studied. World health systems are organizing to respond to the pandemic by expanding capacity in acute intensive care and sub-intensive care units. This study shows that COVID-19 rehabilitation units must be organized and equiped according to the clinical and rehabilitative needs of patients, following specific measures to prevent the spread of infection amongs patients and workers.

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Published

2020-06-30

How to Cite

Iannaccone, S., Alemanno, F., Houdayer, E., Brugliera, L., Castellazzi, P., Cianflone, D., Meloni, C., Ambrosio, A., Mortini, P., Spina, A., & Filippi, M. (2020). COVID-19 rehabilitation units are twice as expensive as regular rehabilitation units. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 52(6), 1–4. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2704

Issue

Section

Short Communication