Multimorbidity drives responsiveness to rehabilitation in critical illness: A patient level meta-analysis of four randomized trials
J. Jones (Melbourne, Australia), Z. Puthucheary (London, United Kingdom), A. Karahalios (Melbourne, Australia), M. Berry (North Carolina, United States), D. Files (North Carolina, United States), D. Griffith (Edinburgh, United Kingdom), L. Mcdonald (Melbourne, Australia), P. Morris (Kentucky, United States), M. Moss (Colorado, United States), A. Nordon-Craft (Colorado, United States), T. Walsh (Edinburgh, United Kingdom), S. Berney (Melbourne, Australia), L. Denehy (Melbourne, Australia)
Source: International Congress 2022 – COVID 19: intensive care unit treatment
Session: COVID 19: intensive care unit treatment
Session type: Thematic Poster
Number: 2767
Rating:
You must login to grade this presentation.
Share or cite this content
Citations should be made in the following way:
J. Jones (Melbourne, Australia), Z. Puthucheary (London, United Kingdom), A. Karahalios (Melbourne, Australia), M. Berry (North Carolina, United States), D. Files (North Carolina, United States), D. Griffith (Edinburgh, United Kingdom), L. Mcdonald (Melbourne, Australia), P. Morris (Kentucky, United States), M. Moss (Colorado, United States), A. Nordon-Craft (Colorado, United States), T. Walsh (Edinburgh, United Kingdom), S. Berney (Melbourne, Australia), L. Denehy (Melbourne, Australia). Multimorbidity drives responsiveness to rehabilitation in critical illness: A patient level meta-analysis of four randomized trials. 2767
You must login to share this Presentation/Article on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or by email.
Member's Comments
Related content which might interest you:
|
|