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Journal Article

Citation

Kyrychenko A, Tomakh N, Khanyukova I, Sanina N. Georgian Med. News 2022; (333): 77-85.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, International Academy of Science, Education, Industry and Arts)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

36780628

Abstract

The purpose of the study - to conduct an analysis of the disability of ATO/JFO participants in 2014-2021 with a detailed comparative analysis of data of 2021 and determination of the needs of the mentioned contingent in rehabilitation devices. Operational information was collected according to the statistic form of ATO/OOS participants examined at the medical and social expert commissions: developed by the authors statistical form "Report on the causes of disability, indications for medical, professional and social rehabilitation in ATO participants for _____ year", which was summarized and processed. Materials were collected from 2014 to 2021. More than a half of those recognized for the first time as disabled, 2,997 people in 2021 (86.0%), 2,624 people in 2020 (81.2%), 3,297 people in 2019 (79.3%), 2,848 people (75.5%) in 2018 and 1,859 people (65.0%) in 2017 - received the disability group not as a result of traumatic injuries, but for other unspecified reasons that did not have a traumatization factor. The main causes of disability were diseases of the circulatory system (47.9%), musculoskeletal system (13.4%), mental and behavioral disorders (7.2%), neoplasms (3.8%), diseases of the nervous system (3.3%), endocrine diseases, nutritional disorders, and metabolic disorders (3.2%), diseases of the digestive organs (2.0%), some infectious and parasitic diseases (1.6%), respiratory diseases (1.3%) and other reasons (0.7%). In 2021, less than ΒΌ (14.0%) of ATO/JFO participants were initially recognized as disabled due to various traumatic injuries, which is 25.5% less than in 2020. Among the patients with injuries of the musculoskeletal system, prevailed the victims with injuries of the lower extremities - 92 people, with injuries of the upper extremities - 44 people, polytraumas 38 people, combined injuries - 22 people. Traumatic lesions of the spinal cord led to the onset of disability in 7 persons, traumatic eye lesions in 12 persons. Medical rehabilitation services, including restorative treatment, reconstructive surgery, and orthotics, were the most needed among the examined ATO/JFO participants. More than half of the participants of ATO/JFO received the disability group due to other reasons that did not have a trauma factor, not traumatic injuries. Traumatic brain lesions accounted for 6.9% of the total number of ATO/JFO participants recognized as disabled, musculoskeletal injuries - 3.9%. 1.1% were recognized as disabled due to polytraumas, 0.2% due to combined injuries. Traumatic lesions of the spinal cord led to the onset of disability in 0.2%. With a traumatic eye injury, 0.3% were recognized as disabled. Complicated limb injuries with damage to peripheral nerves accounted for 0.1% and blood vessels - 0.1%. Medical rehabilitation services, including restorative treatment, reconstructive surgery, and orthotics, were the most needed among ATO/JFO participants examined. The increase in the number of ATO/JFO participants initially recognized as disabled due to reasons not related to traumatic lesions requires further careful analysis, determination of the reasons for such a situation and the development of effective measures for the prevention of disability and the return of lost functionality in the specified contingent, which will become the topic of further research.


Language: en

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