Current status of rehabilitation activity and the new health care reform in Norway
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27000Date
2015-08-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to analyse the current activities of Norwegian
ambulatory rehabilitation teams at a time when the field of rehabilitation is set for
major changes with the recent introduction of the new pro-rehabilitation
Coordination Reform. The content of the all logged consultations of four
ambulatory teams belonging to one of the four regional health authorities was
analysed in terms of municipality population size and, where possible, the agedistribution of the patients. Consultations were coded into one of four main
codes, i.e. investigation and diagnostics; treatment and practical training; consultation, collaboration and training; and auxiliary measures. A total of 2992
consultations were registered for period 20092012, with the far majority of
consultations involving patients aged 567 years, and the elderly underrepresented in especially the smaller municipalities. Analysis showed differential
rehabilitation activity towards the elderly in the two rehabilitation teams which
registered the far majority of consultations, which were also concentrated in only
three of the 18 sub-codes. Provision of rehabilitation seems to lack an overall
coordinating strategy. The kind and level of rehabilitation any given elderly
person is entitled to, by and large, depends on the place of residence of the
patient.
Publisher
Stockholm University PressCitation
Tingvoll W, McClusky L. Current status of rehabilitation activity and the new health care reform in Norway. Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research. 2015;17(2):115-129Metadata
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Copyright 2015 The Author(s)