Review of Italy's rehabilitation workforce reform highlights strategic opportunities for system alignment and disparity reduction
This narrative policy and health systems analysis examines the Italian rehabilitation workforce, contrasting current structures with historical professional categories, regional variability, and selected European models. The scope includes a comparison against WHO and EU standards to evaluate the potential for improvement. The authors focus on service access, quality, and sustainability as primary outcomes of interest for health planners and policymakers.
The analysis suggests that implementing coherent regulation, competency-based education, and need-driven planning can address existing gaps. These interventions are proposed as a strategic opportunity to reduce disparities and enhance overall system performance within the Italian context. The review does not report specific adverse events or numerical data regarding patient outcomes.
The authors note that the evidence is based on policy analysis rather than clinical trial data. Consequently, the findings represent qualitative conclusions about system reform rather than causal claims about specific treatments. Practice relevance is framed as a strategic opportunity to align national practices with global standards, acknowledging that follow-up duration was not reported.