Burn care and rehabilitation in Australia: health professionals’ perspectives
Objective: To understand health professionals’ perspectives of burn care and rehabilitation.
Design: Qualitative and semi-structured interviews.
Setting: Australian burn and rehabilitation units.
Participants: Twenty-two clinicians working in burns units across disciplines and healthcare settings.
Results: The data portrayed the health professionals’ perspectives of burn care and rehabilitation in Australia. Three themes were identified: (1) interprofessional collaboration; (2) integrated community care, and (3) empowering patients to self-care.
Conclusion: Burn care and rehabilitation remains a complex and a challenging area of care with limited access to burn services especially in rural and remote areas. Interprofessional training and education of health professionals involved with the complex care of burn injury remains a key element to support and sustain the long-term rehabilitation requirements for patients and their families. Empowering patients to develop independence early in their rehabilitation is fundamental to their ongoing recovery. A burns model of care that embraces a multidisciplinary collaboration and integrated care across the continuum has the potential to positively impact recovery and improve health outcomes.
History
Publication title
Disability and RehabilitationVolume
41Issue
6Pagination
714-719ISSN
0963-8288Department/School
School of NursingPublisher
Taylor & FrancisPlace of publication
United KingdomRights statement
Copyright 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis GroupRepository Status
- Restricted