A new care pathway aims to bridge that gap.
Why the current system fails
People with severe neuro-disabilities often need round-the-clock care. Think of someone who cannot speak, cannot move independently, or needs a breathing tube.
After a long hospital stay, they go home. But the care they get there often does not match what they received in the hospital. Community therapists may lack training for such complex cases. Home nurses may not know the patient's history.
The result is frustration. Families feel abandoned. Patients do not get the best care. And the system wastes time and money.
A new way to connect care
The old way was simple: discharge the patient and hope for the best. The new way is different.
Researchers developed a clinical pathway. Think of it as a roadmap. It connects three groups: the hospital specialists, the home nurses, and the community therapists.
But here is the twist. The hospital team does not just hand off the patient. They stay involved through a Regional Outreach Follow-up Team (ROFT). This team visits the home, trains the nurses, and helps with tough decisions.
It is like having a specialist on speed dial.
The ROFT team acts as a bridge. They know the patient from the hospital. They know what the community team needs. And they keep everyone on the same page.
The study found that this approach works. The 11 healthcare professionals interviewed across three groups largely agreed. The pathway makes sense. It helps patients get the right care at home.
But there is a catch.
What still stands in the way
The study identified several barriers. The biggest one is money.
In Germany, funding is fragmented. One pot of money pays for hospital care. Another pot pays for home care. A third pot pays for therapy. None of them want to pay for coordination.
So who pays for the ROFT team to visit a home? Who pays for the weekly phone call between the hospital doctor and the community nurse?
No one does. At least not yet.
Other barriers include a lack of trained therapists in the community and no shared system for keeping patient records.
What this means for families
This study is not about a new drug or a new surgery. It is about a better system.
For families caring for someone with a severe neuro-disability, this matters. It means fewer phone calls to different agencies. It means the hospital team does not disappear. It means the home nurse knows what the hospital doctor knows.
But this is not available everywhere. The pathway is still being tested. And even where it exists, the funding problems make it hard to use.
This does not mean the pathway is ready for every family yet.
The limits of this research
This study has important limits. It only included 11 healthcare professionals. It did not include patients or their caregivers. That is a big gap.
The researchers admit this. They say future studies must ask patients and families what they need.
Also, this is a German study. The healthcare system there is different from the US or the UK. The barriers may look different in other countries.
What happens next
The researchers plan to keep testing the pathway. They want to add the patient and caregiver voice. They also want to find ways to fix the funding problem.
This kind of research takes time. Changing how a whole system works does not happen overnight. But the goal is clear: make sure people with severe neuro-disabilities get the care they need, no matter where they live.
For now, the message for families is simple. If you are caring for someone with a severe brain injury at home, ask your hospital if they have a follow-up team. And if they do not, ask why not.