Study: Getting Patients Out of Bed Soon After Stroke Is Good Medicine

Early and frequent movement reduces risk of serious complications in seniors, researchers find.

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2016-02-18

It may be good for hospitalized stroke patients to be taken out of bed for frequent but short periods of movement, researchers report.

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The study looked at more than 2,100 patients in a hospital stroke unit and found that getting them out of bed and moving around soon after their stroke benefited them.

The more often this was done, the better their physical recovery and their chances of regaining their independence three months after their stroke, according to the study.

But researchers found the sessions were only effective when kept short. Increasing the length of each session reduced the likelihood that patients would be independent within a few months.

Some experts have raised concerns about the safety of getting patients out of bed soon after a stroke, but the researchers found no evidence that doing so increased the risk of serious problems.

Early and frequent out-of-bed movement helped reduce the risk of serious complications in patients between the ages of 65 and 80, according to expert.

Source: U.S. Department of Health & Human Services