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Abstract Details

Quantifying Discharge Recommendations for Adults Post-stroke During Acute Hospitalization
Neuro-rehabilitation
P4 - Poster Session 4 (8:00 AM-9:00 AM)
14-005

This study examined patterns in physical (PT) and occupational therapy (OT) recommendations for post-acute rehabilitation during an acute stroke hospitalization.

Discharge planning during an acute stroke hospitalization is complex. The initial PT and OT recommendations often initiate discharge planning, making this a critical decision point, but this process is poorly understood.

This cohort study included adults who were hospitalized for an ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke within a large academic health system from January 1, 2018– December 31, 2024. All demographic and clinical data were extracted from the electronic health record. Kappa scores examined agreement between the PT and OT initial and final discharge recommendations. A generalized logistic regression evaluated factors associated with a change in the discharge recommendation during the acute admission.

The cohort comprised 10,684 hospitalizations with a mean age of 68.6 years. There was almost perfect agreement between the initial PT and OT discharge recommendations (κ = 0.86), and the final recommendation (κ = 0.86). The initial PT and OT recommendations were unchanged from evaluation to discharge for 6478 (60.6%) of cases. Discharge to an inpatient rehabilitation facility was the most common disposition at both time points. The strongest associations with a change in the PT/OT discharge recommendation were a longer hospital admission, hemorrhagic stroke, ICU admission, physiatry consultation, and a higher AM-PAC activities of daily living score.

Although many patients typically improve to varying degrees during a stroke hospitalization, PT and OT recommendations for discharge rarely change. Future work can investigate if patients discharge to where they were recommended to go, and how longer-term outcomes may vary by those whose recommendations changed during the admission versus those who did not change.

Authors/Disclosures
Rujula Upasani
PRESENTER
Miss Upasani has nothing to disclose.
Siyu Yan, MS Ms. Yan has nothing to disclose.
Ziyan Xu, MD Dr. Xu has nothing to disclose.
Kiersten M. McCartney, PhD, PT Dr. McCartney has received personal compensation in the range of $500-$4,999 for serving as a Subject Matter Expert with Adaptive Training Academy.
Stephen Hampton, MD The institution of Dr. Hampton has received research support from U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The institution of Dr. Hampton has received research support from U.S. Department of War.
Robert Burke (University of Pennsylvania) The institution of Robert Burke has received research support from National Institute on Aging, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, VA Health Services Research.
Mucio Delgado, MD The institution of Dr. Delgado has received research support from PCORI. The institution of Dr. Delgado has received research support from NIH.
Kimberly Waddell, PhD The institution of Dr. Waddell has received research support from Department of Veterans Affairs.