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Journal Article

Citation

Lawler K, Shields N, Taylor NF. Clin. Rehabil. 2019; ePub(ePub): 269215519853874.

Affiliation

Allied Health Clinical Research Office, Eastern Health, Box Hill, VIC, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0269215519853874

PMID

31169029

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the safety and effectiveness of augmenting physiotherapy with family-assisted therapy, to inform a future, fully powered trial.

DESIGN: Parallel pilot randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Transition Care Program. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-five older adults with multimorbidity, recently hospitalized, with a mean age of 84.1 years (SD = 6.1 years) and mean Modified Barthel Index of 67.8 units (SD = 19.2 units), and 40 family members. INTERVENTIONS: The control group ( n = 18) received usual physiotherapy care. The experimental group ( n = 17) received usual physiotherapy care and family-assisted therapy from a family member trained by a physiotherapist. MAIN MEASURES: Primary outcomes were falls-related self-efficacy measured by the Short Falls Efficacy Scale - International and falls during the intervention period. Secondary outcomes included daily steps, EQ-5D-3L (three-level version of the EuroQoL five-dimensional health-related quality of life questionnaire) and ICECAP-O (ICEpop CAPability measure for Older people), Modified Barthel Index and Modified Caregiver Strain Index.

RESULTS: There were no between-group differences for falls-related self-efficacy. Relative to the control group, the experimental group was observed to have a reduced risk of falling (relative risk = 0.38, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.09-1.60) and a reduced falls rate (incidence rate ratio = 0.22, 95% CI = 0.04-1.20) was of borderline statistical significance. The experimental group walked a mean of 944 daily steps more than the control group (95% CI = 139-1748) and had a significant reduction in activity limitation. There were no between-group differences for quality of life or caregiver strain.

CONCLUSION: Augmenting physiotherapy with family-assisted therapy is feasible for older people transitioning from hospital to the community. A fully powered randomized controlled trial is indicated.


Language: en

Keywords

Physiotherapy; caregiver; family; older adults; physical activity; training

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