Evaluating Acute Polytrauma Rehabilitation: A Literature Review With Insights From the UK Major Trauma Network

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

Ishaku, Zabrang

Contact

Check for full-text access

Issue Date

2025

Type

Article

Language

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Major trauma is a leading cause of disability in young adults, and modern trauma systems increasingly recognise that survival alone is insufficient; functional recovery and quality of life are essential outcomes. This review evaluates the benefits, challenges, and future development needs of integrating acute polytrauma rehabilitation (APR) into trauma systems, with reference to London's Major Trauma System. It synthesises contemporary evidence from systematic reviews, clinical audits, the European and UK trauma guidelines, and observational studies addressing APR timing, delivery, outcomes, and system-level implementation. The review demonstrates that APR reduces complications associated with prolonged immobilisation, improves mobility and functional independence, enhances return-to-work outcomes, and may shorten hospital length of stay, which contributes to significant long-term cost savings through improved patient independence and reduced reliance on ongoing health and social care. Future directions should prioritise expanding acute and post-acute rehabilitation capacity, supported by coordinated referral pathways, and strengthening community follow-up services. These measures are essential to providing comprehensive, holistic recovery support, ensuring that trauma survivors not only live but also regain meaningful independence and quality of life.

Description

Citation

Publisher

License

Journal

Cureus

Volume

17

Issue

12

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN