Rehabilitation of Persons with Spinal Cord Injury in Bangladesh

Mymensingh Med J. 2022 Oct;31(4):1093-1101.

Abstract

There is a knowledge gap about the rehabilitation system for the persons with spinal cord injury (SCI). A rehabilitation scenario is necessary to conduct a national community survey in conjunction with the International Spinal Cord Injury Community Survey (InSCI) in order to gather data on the lived experiences of people with SCI, to map out the health and rehabilitation system of Bangladesh, it's demographic characteristics, accessible resources and rehabilitation challenges. Information for this narrative report was acquired through a structured questionnaire, which was supplemented by an online search of agencies, government websites, rehabilitation-related organizations and published papers during the period of March 2020 to April 2021. Bangladesh is a developing country with a vast population and a developing health care system. Representative government and non-government rehabilitative care settings a total of sixteen survey replies (n=16) were obtained. During the year 2019, a total of 1035 people with SCI were seen. The majority of patients with SCI were hospitalized by a non-government facility (38.65%), whereas the two main public general hospitals consulted roughly 30.0% of people with SCI. The rehabilitation team leader in the majority of the facilities (93.75%) was a physiatrist, but just a few had a full complement of rehabilitation professionals and only 12.5% of settings provide community care. Indoor rehabilitation facilities, equipment and a competent rehabilitation staff are not available at many of the tertiary care facilities including National Trauma Institute (NITOR), where most of the SCI report first after the trauma. A consistent and nationwide data source is unavailable and the majority of the available SCI research publications are hospital-based demographic studies in Bangladesh. SCI was commonly due to work-related trauma in young male manual laborers due to fall from height or road traffic accidents. The country faces multiple challenges in rehabilitation of people with SCI regarding triage, a referral system development, infrastructure and shortage of expert human resources in addition, currently there is no three-tier rehabilitation care continuum available. Keeping pace with the transition to a developed country by 2041, the Bangladesh health sector also has to be oriented to face the focused challenge of caring for people with SCI. As recommended by WHO Rehabilitation 2030 initiatives, establishment of an SCI dedicated national institute and escalation of number of related specialists such as trauma and orthopedic surgery, spinal neurosurgery and physical rehabilitation medicine, skilled professionals such as rehabilitation nurses, therapists, case managers and social workers to work in a team required for specialized care of SCI.

MeSH terms

  • Accidental Falls
  • Bangladesh
  • Hospitals
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Spinal Cord Injuries* / epidemiology
  • Surveys and Questionnaires