Standard of care for rehabilitation in critical illness
Intensive Care Medicine: Published: 30 April 2026
Background
Rehabilitation is recognised as a cornerstone of intensive
care, essential for optimising functional recovery and reducing long-term
disability. Contemporary ICU populations, characterised by advanced age,
multimorbidity, and prolonged stays, are at heightened risk of muscle wasting,
immobility, frailty, cognitive decline, and functional dependence. Mitigation
of these sequelae requires careful interprofessional collaboration for
person-centred rehabilitation across the care continuum.
Content
This review synthesises evidence from randomised controlled
trials, meta-analyses, and clinical practice guidelines on rehabilitation
during and after intensive care. Best practice within the ICU begins with early
awakening and mobilisation with evidence demonstrating that physical
rehabilitation is safe, with low adverse-event rates. Furthermore,
multiprofessional strategies that span across ICU, ward, and community are
required to address complex problems including physical, cognitive, and
psychological sequelae of critical illness.
Future directions
Research priorities include detailed reporting of
intervention dose (timing, intensity, duration) for both usual care and
rehabilitation provided within clinical trials, and development of intervention
implementation strategies that enhance uptake and fidelity in routine practice.
Conclusion
Rehabilitation is integral to contemporary ICU care,
spanning the trajectory of recovery into the community. Within the ICU, it
requires interprofessional, experienced healthcare personnel to assess clinical
status for safe rehabilitation and to identify an individual’s anticipated
recovery trajectory. Standardised intervention reporting and
implementation-focussed research are essential to advance evidence and improve
outcomes for critically ill patients.
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