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British Thoracic Society survey of rehabilitation to support recovery of the post-COVID-19 population

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-16, 15:47 authored by Sally SinghSally Singh, Amy C Barradell, Neil GreeningNeil Greening, Charlotte Bolton, Gisli Jenkins, Louise Preston, John R Hurst
ObjectiveA proportion of those recovering from COVID-19 are likely to have significant and ongoing symptoms, functional impairment and psychological disturbances. There is an immediate need to develop a safe and efficient discharge process and recovery programme. Established rehabilitation programmes are well placed to deliver a programme for this group but will most likely need to be adapted for the post-COVID-19 population. The purpose of this survey was to rapidly identify the components of a post-COVID-19 rehabilitation assessment and elements of a successful rehabilitation programme that would be required to deliver a comprehensive service for those post-COVID-19 to inform service delivery.DesignA survey comprising a series of closed questions and a free-text comment box allowing for a qualitative analysis.SettingOnline survey.ParticipantsMultiprofessional clinicians across specialties were invited to take part.Results1031 participants responded from a broad range of specialties. There was overwhelming support for an early posthospital discharge recovery programme to advise patients about the management of fatigue (95% agreed/strongly agreed), breathlessness (94%) and mood disturbances (including symptoms of anxiety and depression, 92%). At the time point of 6–8 weeks, an assessment was considered important, focusing on a broad range of possible symptoms and supporting a return to work. Recommendations for the intervention described a holistic programme focusing on symptom management, return of function and return to employment. The free-text comments added depth to the survey and the need ‘not to reinvent the wheel’ but rather adapt well-established rehabilitation services to individually tailor needs-based care with continued learning for service development.ConclusionThe responses indicate a huge interest and the urgent need to establish a programme to support and mitigate the long-term impact of COVID-19 by optimising and individualising existing rehabilitation programmes.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Psychology & Vision Sciences Respiratory Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMJ OPEN

Volume

10

Issue

12

Pagination

(10)

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP

issn

2044-6055

eissn

2044-6055

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2025-04-16

Spatial coverage

England

Language

English

Deposited by

Ms Amy Barradell

Deposit date

2025-04-11