The effect of inpatient rehabilitation programmes on quality of life in patients with cystic fibrosis: A multi-center study

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Abstract

Background: Disease-specific, multimodal inpatient rehabilitation programmes are designed to improve the physical, emotional, and social functioning of patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). This study investiga tes the effects of a 4-week inpatient rehabilitation program on health-related quality of life (QL). Methods: 84 German patients with CF (16-62 years of age, FEVI mean 52.9% of the predicted), participating in an inpatient rehabilitation programme, completed the Questions on Life Satisfaction-Modules (FLZM) at the beginning and one month after the end of intervention. The FLZM allows the multi-dimensional evaluation of subjectively perceived satisfaction with general and health-specific life domains. In addition, medical parameters (FEVI, Body Mass Index) and sociodemographic data were registered. Results: Compared to the baseline scores, after rehabilitation, participants were significantly more satisfied with general, health-related, and CF-related aspects of their lives. Specifically, improvement was noted in the following items: breathing difficulties/ cough, sleep, integration of therapy into daily routine, leisure activities, general health perception, physical condition and being free from anxiety. Conclusion: Comprehensive inpatient rehabilitation programmes are a promising strategy to improve the quality of life of adolescent and adult CF-patients. © 2006 Schmitz and Goldbeck; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Schmitz, T. G., & Goldbeck, L. (2006). The effect of inpatient rehabilitation programmes on quality of life in patients with cystic fibrosis: A multi-center study. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, 4. https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7525-4-8

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