Abstract

The functioning of a hospital for chronic diseases was examined in terms of the type of patient referred, the course in the hospital and the eventual outcome, in a prospective study of a year's admissions to one department of Harzfeld Hospital in Israel. Of the 191 patients admitted, 55 percent were assessed as possible candidates for rehabilitation, and two-thirds were discharged. Among those admitted primarily for nursing reasons, the mortality was 76 percent. The average stay was 68 days for the 47 percent who were discharged and 95 days for the 45 percent who died; 8.4 percent remained as long-stay patients. Mobility improved in 37 percent and deteriorated in 8 percent; independence in self-care increased from 13 percent on admission to 51 percent on discharge. Thirty percent of the discharges occurred in the first month, and further 30 percent in the second month; 85 percent of these patients returned to their own homes. The hospital stay exceeded 6 months in 18 percent, of whom 7 percent died and 3 percent were later discharged. The possibility of release from the hospital was influenced by the degree of disability rather than the social circumstances. The best change for improvement was among the patients who required only partial help on admission. The most important tasks of the hospital were: intensive and sometimes prolonged rehabilitation; basic nursing care; medical reevaluation and sometimes referral for surgical salvage operations; attention to acute and subacute medical problems, some of which occurred as complications, including accidents; and the concentration of physiotherapy and occupational therapy where most needed. Achievement of these aims was based on fostering a cooperative spirit between patients and staff, adjusting to the problem of re-integrating the long-stay patient, and coordinating specialist services from other hospitals when needed.

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