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Perspectives in Rehabilitation

Inter-professional communication and interaction in the neurological rehabilitation team: a literature review

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Pages 1607-1615 | Received 12 Jan 2018, Accepted 23 Sep 2018, Published online: 20 Nov 2018
 

Abstract

Background: Neurological early rehabilitation aims at regaining cooperativity and acquiring rehabilitation capability with brain-injured patients, most of whom are transferred from Intensive Care Units, most of whom still require intensive care and suffer from disorders of consciousness. In neurological early rehabilitation, therapeutic nursing is an integral part of the therapeutic team. Other than the specialized therapists, nurses are present on the ward 24/7, which gives them a closer perspective on the patient. The research question was how do nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists and speech therapists communicate and interact as teams in neurological rehabilitation wards. A literature review was conducted aiming at inter-professional communication and interaction with special regard to the role of these four professionals being the core team members in these settings.

Methods: A literature search was conducted in the period from August to October 2016 within the following electronic Databases: Medline, CINAHL, PSYNDEX, SpeechBITE, PEDro und OTseeker. Further searches were undertaken in the reference lists of obtained studies to locate other relevant material. The aim was to gather and evaluate the evidence about inter-professional teamwork in neurological early rehabilitation. The main inclusion criterion was the presence of the following professionals as participants in the study: Nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists and speech therapists. Twenty-seven studies were found relevant, of which 17 (12 qualitative and five quantitative) bore empirical results that related to the research questions. These 17 studies were qualitatively analysed for the grade of evidence, methods and the relevance for the conditions and processes in rehabilitation units. Out of 17 studies, four were performed in neurological rehabilitation settings, five in stroke units, six in general rehabilitation, one in short-term care rehabilitation and one in geriatric rehabilitation. Due to the scarcity of material, all these studies were analysed under the perspective of relevance for neurological early rehabilitation.

Results: The results of this exploratory literature review indicate that the efficiency and quality of cooperation in rehabilitation teams could be improved through a better patient-oriented inter-professional communication. This is achieved through cross-professional team organization, team supervision and by including team communication in vocational and on-the-job-training. Profession-specific terminologies and differences in understanding of roles could be barriers for collaboration in teams.

Conclusions: According to this literature review, successful inter-professional patient-orientated care is promoted by being informed about the various functions of team members from different disciplines, about the role each member plays within the team and communication styles. Means of improving communication are being outlined.

    Implications for Rehabilitation

  • Inter-professional communication is promoted by cross-professional team organization.

  • Inter-professional communication should be included in vocational and on-the-job-training and supervision.

  • Barriers for communication in teams are different terminologies and differences in role perception.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported by BDH – Bundesverband Rehabilitation, Bonn.

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