Neha Sabharwal, DPT is invited to speak on mobility and rehabilitation as systems-level priorities in post-acute and long-term care. Her presentations address how mobility functions as a clinical, operational, and quality metric across skilled nursing, geriatric care, and interdisciplinary health systems.
Poster Presentations
National Health Council Science of Patient Engagement Summit, 2026
Poster Title:
“What Is Not Measured Is Not Protected. Mobility Trajectories as a Patient-Centered Quality Signal in Skilled Nursing Care”
Location: Amazon HQ2, Arlington, Virginia
Role: Poster Presenter
Focus: Mobility surveillance, skilled nursing quality metrics, patient-centered functional outcomes.



Speaking Focus Areas
Mobility as a Systems-Level Quality Standard
Reframing mobility from an episodic therapy task to a continuous system-wide standard that influences functional outcomes, fall risk, care transitions, and quality performance in post-acute care environments.
Rehabilitation Leadership and Interdisciplinary Integration
Aligning rehabilitation practice with nursing, medical, and operational workflows to support sustainable mobility outcomes, workforce integration, and coordinated care delivery across skilled nursing and geriatric settings.
Implementation, Measurement, and Health System Impact
Translating mobility-focused frameworks into scalable implementation models, with emphasis on measurable outcomes, quality indicators, and system-level performance in aging care and post-acute health systems.
Leadership Context
Her leadership experience includes directing rehabilitation programs, guiding interdisciplinary teams, and contributing to professional discourse on mobility, rehabilitation systems, and aging care. This work emphasizes operational alignment, evidence-informed practice, and sustainable models of rehabilitation delivery.
Speaking engagements include professional forums, educational programs, interdisciplinary panels, and policy-adjacent discussions focused on rehabilitation systems and mobility outcomes.
Speaking invitations, policy panels, academic discussions, and professional collaborations are welcomed.