The disability dimension concerns behaviors or activities considered essential, such as communicating, moving, eating, bathing, concentrating, etc. may be dependent on another person to carry out these acts considered vital. Through our programs we provide physical rehabilitation therapies as well as medical consultations to people with a permanent disability, temporary disability, whether caused by accident, congenital or derived from any disease, in addition to having programs focused on the prevention of physical disabilities, in groups with chronic or degenerative diseases, seeking to reduce any deficiency or any partial or total reduction in the ability to develop an activity or function.
Program focused on caring for people with physical disabilities, whether permanent or temporary, derived from diseases, accidents or congenital, seeking that patients can partially or totally recover their mobility, focusing efforts on Improvement and to prevent atrophies or chronic discomfort associated with your disability. Likewise, it helps to improve other possible skills or physical abilities to achieve the highest degree of self-sufficiency. Here, programs are developed aimed at promoting not only their physical rehabilitation, but also integration and equal opportunities for people with disabilities, because the improvements help them to participate and interact in their social context to a greater degree, that is, who can perform the greatest number of tasks possible in their school, work, social or family environment, improving the general physical condition and emotional state of the patients.
Program focused on the prevention of limb amputation in people who suffer from type 1 or type 2 diabetes. Complications that usually appear in diabetes can be damage to the nerves (peripheral neuropathy) and poor blood circulation (peripheral arterial disease) especially in the lower extremities, problems that can generate sores on the feet, which due to the conditions of the disease prevent proper healing, causing serious damage to tissues and bones, leading to amputation of a toe, the entire foot or a leg. Lower limb amputations in diabetic patients are more common than in non-diabetics and five out of six amputations occur in diabetes. Statistics reveal that 25% of hospital admissions among diabetics are for foot injuries and of those with diabetic foot, 40% require amputations, 50-70% of all non-traumatic amputations occur in diabetics.
Program focused on the care of older adults who suffer from a disability caused by age, as well as the prevention of sarcopenia, which is a predominantly geriatric disease, with a gradual loss of skeletal muscle mass and a loss of muscle function; which increases the risk of disability, falls and fall-related injuries, hospitalization, limitation of independence and mortality. As the world's population ages, the prevalence of age-related muscle loss will increase, malnutrition and low physical activity appear to be the two main factors associated with sarcopenia. An adequate exercise regimen, accompanied by nutritional interventions, should be of great importance for a better prognosis of sarcopenic and geriatric patients.