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Short Stay Rehab Unit Opens at Salem VAMC

Officials cut the ribbon opening the short-stay rehabilitation clinic
Mark Realmuto, Rehabilitation Coordinator, and Dr. Vivien Osuorah, GEC Service Chief, cut the ribbon officially opening the Short-Stay Rehabilitation Unit located in Bldg. 7. The 10-bed unit also features a dining area, common room and fitness/rehabilitation exercise equipment.
By Rosaire Bushey, Public Affairs Officer

The ribbon was cut Friday, February 23, 2024 opening a new short-stay in-patient rehabilitation unit in Bldg. 7 at the Salem VA Medical Center.

The unit, which includes 10 private rooms, dining area, conference/multi-purpose room, and physical rehabilitation fitness facility, is the culmination of a process that began in late 2019 and involved extensive remodeling of the building’s first floor space.

The renovation, done largely in-house, cost more than $50,000, much of which was spent on room and exercise equipment.

According to Mark Realmuto, Occupational Therapist and the facility coordinator, the facility falls under the umbrella of the Community Living Center that treats hospice, long term care, respite, and rehabilitation patients.

“The CLC has limited bed space and so Veterans who require inpatient rehabilitation have been forced to use community care, which is much less convenient and often doesn’t offer the same array of services,” Realmuto said. “Having this facility allows us to accept more Veterans to stay in the VA system and allow their providers to follow them from acute care to short-stay rehab, and as-needed as they transition to outpatient care.”

Being in a single location, the facility will also create a positive synergy among nurses, and a wide variety of therapists to include orthopedics, physical, occupational, speech, music and others.

“It’s all focused rehabilitation designed to help Veterans improve function, independence and getting back to where they belong,” Realmuto said. “From knee replacements to strokes, we have a facility where patients can get care and rehabilitation on a single floor, and where nurses and providers can be with patients and monitor their progress.”

The next project Realmuto has his sights on is adding more space and functionality to the kinesiotherapy section and renovating the clinic to allow for more Gerofit class space for older Veterans.