Rehabilitation is not reserved for healthcare professionals. Families, neighbors, volunteers, caregivers, and social workers can all become actors in this fundamental pillar. Prevention, curative care, and palliative care are not enough if the person is not actively supported in daily life. Rehabilitation creates this bridge between care and real life.
I am Christophe Delong, autonomy coordinator at Jamacare. My role is to train, guide, and coordinate all these actors so that every gesture and every act becomes an effective contribution to autonomy and quality of life. A simple furniture adjustment, a hygiene tip, or encouragement to move are all actions that fall within the broader framework of rehabilitation.
Every actor, from a caring neighbor to an experienced caregiver, helps transform fragility into strength and dependency into social participation. Rehabilitation is therefore not a distant service; it is a collective movement where prevention, curative, and palliative care are brought to life by human action every day.
This fundamental, often invisible pillar is the key for everyone to continue living fully despite limitations and vulnerabilities. With rehabilitation, we restore each person’s place in society and in their own life.
With Jamacare, become an actor of rehabilitation around you and contribute to a more autonomous, supportive, and humane society.
