Pulmonary rehabilitation: an historical perspective

Seminars in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Brian W Carlin

Abstract

Pulmonary rehabilitation is a standard of care for patients with chronic lung disease. Through appropriate patient selection and assessment, exercise training, educational and psychosocial intervention, nutritional counseling, and breathing retraining, many benefits (e.g., reduction in level of dyspnea, improvement in exercise tolerance, improvement in health-related quality of life, and reduction in health care resource utilization) are gained by patients who have undergone rehabilitation. From the initial finding of improved patient's capabilities, to times of extreme skepticism and doubt, to the state of being a standard of care, pulmonary rehabilitation has undergone many periods of transformation over the last several decades. This review expands upon previous reviews of the history behind modern-day pulmonary rehabilitation.

Citations

Apr 6, 2012·Paediatric Respiratory Reviews·Andreas JungRoger Lauener
Mar 16, 2013·The Open Respiratory Medicine Journal·Michele L McCarrollMatthew L Krauza
Apr 6, 2011·Epidemiology·Richard F MacLehoseBradley P Carlin

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