RecoverED Intervention
Cross-source consensus on RecoverED Intervention from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
Dosage & preparation
Preparation
Comparisons
Other
Highlighted claims
- The RecoverED programme begins within two weeks of hospital discharge. — Rehabilitation intervention to improve Recovery after an Episode of Delirium in adults over 65 years (RecoverED): a multicentre, single-arm feasibility study in NHS acute hospitals in the UK
- A rehabilitation support worker delivers up to 10 personalised sessions over 12 weeks using an intervention manual. — Rehabilitation intervention to improve Recovery after an Episode of Delirium in adults over 65 years (RecoverED): a multicentre, single-arm feasibility study in NHS acute hospitals in the UK
- RecoverED was developed using a realist-informed approach aligned with the MRC framework for complex interventions. — Rehabilitation intervention to improve Recovery after an Episode of Delirium in adults over 65 years (RecoverED): a multicentre, single-arm feasibility study in NHS acute hospitals in the UK
- Participants used a recovery record to document progress, plan activities, access advice and education, and engage with psychosocial support. — Rehabilitation intervention to improve Recovery after an Episode of Delirium in adults over 65 years (RecoverED): a multicentre, single-arm feasibility study in NHS acute hospitals in the UK
- RecoverED was designed to address the lack of structured support after hospitalisation for delirium. — Rehabilitation intervention to improve Recovery after an Episode of Delirium in adults over 65 years (RecoverED): a multicentre, single-arm feasibility study in NHS acute hospitals in the UK
- RecoverED is delivered in the home and differs from related models through home delivery and specialised psychosocial and cognitive education for patients and carers. — Rehabilitation intervention to improve Recovery after an Episode of Delirium in adults over 65 years (RecoverED): a multicentre, single-arm feasibility study in NHS acute hospitals in the UK