Objectives: To monitor participation in a rehabilitation cohort and to identify determinants of change during a 12-month period posthospitalization following the onset of one of several major disabling conditions.
Design: Cohort study.
Setting: Postacute care rehabilitation settings.
Participants: Adults (N=435) aged 18 years and older with complex medical, lower-extremity orthopedic, and major neurologic impairments.
Interventions: Not applicable.
Main outcome measures: At 1-, 6-, and 12-month follow-ups, community participation and social and home participation were assessed by personal interviews using the Participation Measure for Post-Acute Care. Information on potential determinants was abstracted from the medical chart and by personal interview using standardized instruments.
Results: On average, rehabilitation patients achieved modest improvements in their levels of community participation during the first 6 months after acute hospitalization. In contrast, these same patients displayed a modest loss in social and home participation levels during the follow-up period. Activity limitations were the dominant factors that explained much of the variance in the extent of community participation achieved by patients. Personal and social environmental factors played a major role in predicting levels of social and home participation.
Conclusions: The focus of rehabilitation interventions aimed at achieving posthospital participation requires careful consideration of the specific domain of participation that is being targeted.