Reintegration to Normal Living Index
The Reintegration to Normal Living Index (RNLI) is a brief, patient-report measure designed to assess how completely a person has returned to 'normal' community living following a major health event (stroke, head injury, cardiac event, or other condition requiring significant recovery). Developed by Wood-Dauphinee and colleagues in the 1980s, RNLI captures the subjective experience of reintegration: the degree to which the person feels they have resumed their pre-illness social roles, activities, and independence.
Kilderegistrering
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- Wood-Dauphinee, S. L., Opzoomer, M. A., Williams, J. I., Marchand, B., & Spitzer, W. O. (1988). Assessment of global function: a new measure for evaluating the outcome of rehabilitation of post-stroke patients. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 69(7), 506–515. · URL
- Schubert, D. S., Buchsbaum, M. S., Orsulak, P. J., King, R. J., & Stoddard, G. (1992). Neuropsychological evidence for a defect of thalamic filtering in schizophrenia. Biological Psychiatry, 32(7), 556–567. · URL
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