Mobility and dementia: Is physiotherapy treatment during respite care effective?
Mobility and dementia: Is physiotherapy treatment during respite care effective?
BACKGROUND: Mobility problems experienced by elderly people with a dementia are associated with falls, fractures and admission to long-term care. A hospital respite care admission is therefore often seen as an opportunity to provide physiotherapy treatment.
AIM: To find whether elderly people with a dementia and a mobility problem show a greater improvement in mobility skills if given physiotherapy treatment than if given non-physical activities intervention during a hospital respite admission.
METHOD: A controlled randomized multicentre trial with independent blinded assessment. The Southampton Mobility Assessment (mobility score) and Two Minute Walking Test (distance walked) were undertaken at the beginning and end of the study admission and beginning of the next respite admission. Following the first assessment, participants were randomized to either physiotherapy or activities.
RESULTS: Eighty-one participants, from 12 clinical centres, with a mean age of 81.9 years and CAPE I/O score of 2. During the study admission there was a non-significant trend for a lower reduction in mobility score of the physiotherapy group (Mann-Whitney; p = 0.614) and a non-significant trend for greater decrease in distance walked in the activities group (t-test; p = 0.325).
DISCUSSION: The results of this trial do not support the positive changes demonstrated elsewhere. However, changes in respite care during the early stages of this trial may have produced differences between the sample for this trial and that for the pilot study. This trial was therefore underpowered.
CONCLUSION: This trial suggests that future research needs to change the focus from clinical settings to presentations.
dementia, rehabilitation, physical therapy, respite care, motor skills, psychomotor performance, disability evaluation, treatment outcome
389-397
Pomeroy, Valerie M.
bae4318f-c3cb-4256-be2d-d8e4d034bdb2
Warren, Claire M.
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Honeycombe, Cheryl
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Briggs, Roger S.J.
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Wilkinson, David G.
f9c32af3-e183-4fb7-93e6-c83d86f316fd
Pickering, Ruth M.
4a828314-7ddf-4f96-abed-3407017d4c90
Steiner, Andrea
f936e38f-71e8-482a-8c92-b3e2185979c7
1999
Pomeroy, Valerie M.
bae4318f-c3cb-4256-be2d-d8e4d034bdb2
Warren, Claire M.
bb15b449-dd19-4597-9700-ff2001429cd0
Honeycombe, Cheryl
95911a3d-d6e0-4798-a854-0e93887b6637
Briggs, Roger S.J.
a6b65ef0-e90c-4c07-bf5b-b70130c128b3
Wilkinson, David G.
f9c32af3-e183-4fb7-93e6-c83d86f316fd
Pickering, Ruth M.
4a828314-7ddf-4f96-abed-3407017d4c90
Steiner, Andrea
f936e38f-71e8-482a-8c92-b3e2185979c7
Pomeroy, Valerie M., Warren, Claire M., Honeycombe, Cheryl, Briggs, Roger S.J., Wilkinson, David G., Pickering, Ruth M. and Steiner, Andrea
(1999)
Mobility and dementia: Is physiotherapy treatment during respite care effective?
International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 14 (5), .
(doi:10.1002/(SICI)1099-1166(199905)14:5%3C389::AID-GPS933%3E3.0.CO;2-8).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobility problems experienced by elderly people with a dementia are associated with falls, fractures and admission to long-term care. A hospital respite care admission is therefore often seen as an opportunity to provide physiotherapy treatment.
AIM: To find whether elderly people with a dementia and a mobility problem show a greater improvement in mobility skills if given physiotherapy treatment than if given non-physical activities intervention during a hospital respite admission.
METHOD: A controlled randomized multicentre trial with independent blinded assessment. The Southampton Mobility Assessment (mobility score) and Two Minute Walking Test (distance walked) were undertaken at the beginning and end of the study admission and beginning of the next respite admission. Following the first assessment, participants were randomized to either physiotherapy or activities.
RESULTS: Eighty-one participants, from 12 clinical centres, with a mean age of 81.9 years and CAPE I/O score of 2. During the study admission there was a non-significant trend for a lower reduction in mobility score of the physiotherapy group (Mann-Whitney; p = 0.614) and a non-significant trend for greater decrease in distance walked in the activities group (t-test; p = 0.325).
DISCUSSION: The results of this trial do not support the positive changes demonstrated elsewhere. However, changes in respite care during the early stages of this trial may have produced differences between the sample for this trial and that for the pilot study. This trial was therefore underpowered.
CONCLUSION: This trial suggests that future research needs to change the focus from clinical settings to presentations.
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Published date: 1999
Keywords:
dementia, rehabilitation, physical therapy, respite care, motor skills, psychomotor performance, disability evaluation, treatment outcome
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Local EPrints ID: 33673
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/33673
PURE UUID: c9fe3ed4-cf24-434e-98f1-a04a6a997bf6
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:45
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Contributors
Author:
Valerie M. Pomeroy
Author:
Claire M. Warren
Author:
Cheryl Honeycombe
Author:
Roger S.J. Briggs
Author:
David G. Wilkinson
Author:
Andrea Steiner
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