Bedridden Patient Care

Patients at Cure Rehab are given additional attention. Sensory alterations and motor problems affect patients in rehabilitation centres with severe neurological illnesses, lowering their quality of life. The location and extent of the lesion define the clinical aspects of central nervous system illnesses. Patients rely on health care experts to help them avoid complications, regain functionality, and improve their quality of life. Professionals must, however, look beyond the clinical characteristics of the neurological disease and consider the patient as a whole. The best health-care services prioritise patient comfort and care quality. Caring entails treating patients with consideration for their social, economic, and family circumstances. In order to give treatment that goes beyond the disease basics, health care practitioners must have a broad perspective.

Patients who are bedridden are frequently kept in bed for long periods of time, resulting in a range of motor difficulties, as well as rapid loss of muscle mass, bone mineral density, and physical handicap as a result of immobility.. Other issues, such as pressure sores, muscular weakness/atrophy, muscular shortness, respiratory challenges, blood circulation issues, and bone demineralization, can occur fast and lead to lengthy healing times. Muscle weakening is most noticeable in skeletal muscle depletion after a few days in the hospital. The skeletal system, as bone metabolism is substantially impaired in the lack of appropriate stimulation, and even the cardiovascular system, as baroreceptor function atrophy, are both affected.