Christie's Story of Recovery from Prolonged Medically Complex Hospitalization
When Christie arrived at Kindred Hospital, she required IV antifungal treatment, respiratory care, and extensive medical management. After working with her interdisciplinary care team, she was able to discharge to Kindred's Acute Rehabilitation Unit, then home
A Patient Success Story from Kindred Hospital North Florida
Christie had a prolonged and medically complex hospitalization due to worsening fungal pneumonia, a heart attack, and sepsis. During her hospital stay, she experienced multiple complications, including an acute kidney injury requiring hemodialysis, prolonged respiratory failure, and a collapsed lung requiring chest tube placement. She was also diagnosed with encephalitis and a stroke. Due to her ventilator dependence and a failure to wean, she required a tracheostomy and PEG tube placement and was eventually transferred to Kindred Hospital North Florida for long-term acute care.
Upon admission to Kindred, Christie remained medically fragile, requiring IV antifungal treatment, respiratory care, and extensive medical management. She was very weak, faced cognitive deficits, and was dependent on others for mobility and self-care tasks. Christie was able to follow only simple commands intermittently, requiring frequent verbal, visual, and tactile cues.
Throughout her 47-day stay, Christie participated in a comprehensive interdisciplinary rehabilitation program involving physical, occupational and speech therapy, nursing, respiratory therapy, and physician collaboration aimed at supporting ventilator weaning, improving functional mobility, and restoring independence.
As her medical condition stabilized, Christie improved in many ways. Christie’s breathing got steadily better with successful ventilator weaning. In addition, she progressed from requiring extensive assistance for basic mobility and self-care to actively participating in rehabilitation sessions with improved strength, endurance, and balance.
With these significant gains, Christie was able to successfully transition to Kindred’s Acute Rehabilitation Unit (ARU), where she kept advancing.
When Christie first came to Kindred, many of her caregivers were concerned that she may not survive. But her remarkable recovery from a medically complex, ventilatordependent state to a patient capable of tolerating intensive rehabilitation reflected both her determination and the coordinated efforts of Kindred’s interdisciplinary team.
After 85 combined days of short-term acute care, long-term acute care, and acute rehab, Christie surpassed everyone’s expectations and returned home to her husband and granddaughters. It was Kindred North Florida’s honor and pleasure to help Christie on her road to full recovery!
Learn more about: Medically Complex Care
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