Rehabilitation is defined as a multimodal, person-centred, collaborative process, including interventions targeting a person's capacity and/or contextual factors related to performance with the goal of optimising the functioning of persons with health conditions currently experiencing disability or likely to experience disability, or persons with disability.1 The complexity of rehabilitation, involving various professionals and disciplines, makes the implementation of evidence-based practice (EBP) particularly challenging.2 Despite clinical research shortcomings and barriers in translating evidence into practice, EBP supports clinical decision-making, quality care, priority setting, and healthcare cost management. Knowledge translation (KT) and mobilisation initiatives are essential for making EBP feasible in rehabilitation and should be strong
Navigating Rehabilitation: the General Index of Rehabilitation Knowledge developed by Cochrane rehabilitation through a global interprofessional Delphi process
ARIENTI, Chiara;
2024-01-01
Abstract
Rehabilitation is defined as a multimodal, person-centred, collaborative process, including interventions targeting a person's capacity and/or contextual factors related to performance with the goal of optimising the functioning of persons with health conditions currently experiencing disability or likely to experience disability, or persons with disability.1 The complexity of rehabilitation, involving various professionals and disciplines, makes the implementation of evidence-based practice (EBP) particularly challenging.2 Despite clinical research shortcomings and barriers in translating evidence into practice, EBP supports clinical decision-making, quality care, priority setting, and healthcare cost management. Knowledge translation (KT) and mobilisation initiatives are essential for making EBP feasible in rehabilitation and should be strongI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.