Progressive exercise and early mobilisation are among the elements of rehabilitation programmes that may improve recovery for people who are hospitalised with severe COVID-19, new research has concluded.
A team at the University of Exeter led a review of all the available evidence on whether rehabilitation benefitted patients who were admitted to intensive or critical care with respiratory illness, as information on people with COVID-19 was not available when the research began.
The PenARC supported study, published in Physiotherapy , found that progressive exercise and getting people mobile early may both help people recover from severe respiratory illness, and those findings could be applied to COVID-19 care. They also found that rehabilitation programmes with a number of different components could be beneficial.
Study lead Vicki Goodwin MBE, PenARC Associate Professor of Ageing and Rehabilitation, said: “COVID-19 can have a devastating impact on people’s lives, long after they leave hospital. We urgently need to find the best ways to support people to regain their health, both in hospital and when they return home. Our research found that getting people moving early on is a key component that can help shape rehabilitation programmes, to get people back on their feet as swiftly as possible”.
The rapid systematic review included 24 systematic reviews, 11 randomised control trials and eight qualitative studies, which interviewed patients about their rehabilitation, to explore their views and experience. From these interviews, the team found that rehabilitation can give hope and confidence to patients, although approaches need to be tailored to the individual.
One rehabilitation programme after hospital discharge from intensive care was found to give people a boost and a different outlook for the future. One patient said: “I just feel full of life. I can’t wait for tomorrow, you know . . . Before it was just day after day, but now it’s – I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”
In another study, the recognition of setting goals to achieve small steps as an important part of recovery. A patient reported: “Well, I was shocked at how little I could do, but now, it’s the other way, I’m actually shocked at how much I can do and I am doing. It’s really good.”
Study co-author Sallie Lamb, Mireille Gillings Professor of Health Innovation at the University of Exeter Medical School, said: “Rehabilitation is a crucial element of COVID-19 care that must not be over-looked. As COVID-19 is still so new, there’s no evidence that evaluate the benefits of rehabilitation programmes for those in recovery. We now urgently need research to evaluate the benefit of programmes to patients with COVID-19 specifically.”
The paper is entitled “Rehabilitation to enable recovery from COVID-19: a rapid systematic review.” Collaborators were Nottingham Universities NHS Trust, the University of East Anglia and the University of Nottingham.