Re: Settle this please...
I've never worked on a med/surg unit, so I cannot make the comparison between the two specialties. However, rehab is usually considered long term acute care (LTAC) in my area. In other words, it is a form of acute care.
On the rehab unit where I work, we dealt with a lot of central lines, IV antibiotics, CPM machines, feeding tubes, suture removal, surgical staple removal, complicated wound care, ostomy appliances, diabetic management, casts, braces, splints, cervical halos, and so forth. Most of my patients had recently underwent surgical procedures such as laminectomies, knee and hip arthroplasties, kyphoplasties, CABGs, hysterectomies, limb amputations, colectomies, thromboembolectomies, and abdominal aortic aneurysm repairs. The non-surgical patients were admitted for recovery from CVAs, acute MIs, debility, cancer, fractures, status post pneumonia, deconditioned states, failure to thrive, status post falls, and generalized weakness.
You will bust your buns in rehab, but you will also learn so much!
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