Rehabilitation with intensive attention training early after acquired brain injury promotes better long-term status on health-related quality of life, daily activities, work ability and return to work.

Authors:
Markovic G; Bartfai A; Schult ML; Ekholm J.

Journal:
J Rehabil Med

Publication Year: 2024

DOI:
10.2340/jrm.v56.5308

PMCID:
PMC10802788

PMID:
38214119

Journal Information

Journal Title: J Rehabil Med

Detailed journal information not available.

Publication Details

Subject Category: Rehabilitation

Available in Europe PMC: Yes

Available in PMC: Yes

PDF Available: No

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50.0% Transparent
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Evidence found in paper:

"The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare."

Evidence found in paper:

"The study was funded by Promobilia Foundation, The Swedish Research Council, The Swedish Association for Survivors of Polio, Accident, and Injury (RTP), The Swedish Stroke Association, ALF agreement for clinical research, and supported by the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Danderyd Hospital. The authors acknowledge the assistance of research nurse Seija Lund in data collection, and medical statistician Fredrik Johansson in data analysis. We are grateful to the patients who have shown a willingness to participate. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors."

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Last Updated: Aug 05, 2025