Spinal Cord Injury: Finding a Rehab Center
Spinal Cord Injury: Finding a Rehab CenterSkip to the navigationTopic OverviewRehabilitation (rehab) for a
spinal cord injury (SCI) is typically done in a
special center. You and your family work with a rehab team, a group of health
professionals that designs a unique plan for your recovery. This plan will help
you recover as much function as possible, prevent complications, and help you
live as independently as possible. The team includes your doctor and a rehab
nurse, plus specialists such as
physical and
occupational therapists. The rehab center should be able to meet your special needs. Research
the center keeping this in mind, and ask questions about its staff,
accreditation, equipment, activities, programs, and how it transitions you back
into your community. General questions- Does your center treat only those with an SCI,
or others as well? If it treats others, are people with an SCI kept in the same
or different areas?
- What can you tell me about the patients in your
center? Are they older or younger? Male or female? Do most of them have a
specific level of injury? What is it?
- How many SCIs do you treat in
a year?
- Is your center certified by the Commission on Accreditation
of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF) or the Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO)? Has it been designated as a Model Spinal Cord
Injury Center by the National Institute of Disability Research and
Rehabilitation (NIDRR)?
- Does your rehab plan have both short- and
long-term goals?
- Does your center encourage family members of all
ages to participate in rehab programs?
- Are there living
arrangements for family members participating in training?
- Are
counseling and other social services available to family
members?
- Could I speak to someone who has gone through your
program?
Staffing- Does your regular staff have training in
SCIs?
- Do you have trained SCI specialists/therapists? In what
areas? (Important areas include physical, occupational, speech-language, and
recreational therapies; counseling; and social work.)
- What kind of
and how much experience do your specialists/therapists have?
- How
many people is each specialist/therapist presently caring for?
- Who
is your director and what is his or her background?
Activities and transition into the community- How often and for how long each day will I
receive specialist treatment? (Treatment should be no less then 3 hours a
day, 5 days a week.)
- How much training will my family and I
receive on sexuality, bowel and bladder care, skin care, and essential
self-care activities?
- Do you hold weekend and evening
activities?
- Do you have a facility available where my family and I
can practice self-care skills?
- Do you offer training in the
management and hiring of personal care assistants?
- How will you
plan my discharge and transition into the community? Who do you work with in
the community?
- If I don't live in the community where the center
is, how will my transition be planned?
- Will I receive self-care
materials when I leave the center?
- After I leave, will I have a
contact person at the center for questions or emergencies?
- Will
someone make recommendations as to how I may need to modify my
home?
- Will you provide a follow-up plan? What will it include?
CreditsByHealthwise Staff Primary Medical ReviewerAdam Husney, MD - Family Medicine Specialist Medical ReviewerNancy Greenwald, MD - Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Current as ofOctober 14, 2016 Current as of:
October 14, 2016 Last modified on: 8 September 2017
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