Clinically useful outcome measures for physiotherapy airway clearance techniques: a review
Clinically useful outcome measures for physiotherapy airway clearance techniques: a review
A lack of good outcome measures has been a barrier to the development of an evidence base for all areas of respiratory physiotherapy. Many of the clinically available outcome measures are not specifically related to the physiotherapy intervention employed and may be affected by other factors. In this paper, the outcome measures currently clinically available to UK NHS physiotherapists to assess the response to alveolar recruitment and airway clearance interventions have been reviewed. It is clear that there is an urgent need to increase the accuracy, reliability, and sensitivity of the outcome measures employed, or to develop new measures to assess the effectiveness of respiratory physiotherapy. Lung sounds provide useful, specific information, but standard auscultation is too subjective to allow them to be used as an outcome measure. Computer Aided Lung Sound Analysis (CALSA) is proposed as a new objective, non-invasive, bedside clinical measure with the potential to monitor and assess the effects of airway clearance therapy.
lung sounds, outcome measures, physiotherapy
299-307
Marques, Alda
adcfe8d5-518a-4079-902a-130ebc68d338
Bruton, Anne
9f8b6076-6558-4d99-b7c8-72b03796ed95
Barney, Anna
bc0ee7f7-517a-4154-ab7d-57270de3e815
2006
Marques, Alda
adcfe8d5-518a-4079-902a-130ebc68d338
Bruton, Anne
9f8b6076-6558-4d99-b7c8-72b03796ed95
Barney, Anna
bc0ee7f7-517a-4154-ab7d-57270de3e815
Marques, Alda, Bruton, Anne and Barney, Anna
(2006)
Clinically useful outcome measures for physiotherapy airway clearance techniques: a review.
Physical Therapy Reviews, 11 (4), .
(doi:10.1179/108331906X163441).
Abstract
A lack of good outcome measures has been a barrier to the development of an evidence base for all areas of respiratory physiotherapy. Many of the clinically available outcome measures are not specifically related to the physiotherapy intervention employed and may be affected by other factors. In this paper, the outcome measures currently clinically available to UK NHS physiotherapists to assess the response to alveolar recruitment and airway clearance interventions have been reviewed. It is clear that there is an urgent need to increase the accuracy, reliability, and sensitivity of the outcome measures employed, or to develop new measures to assess the effectiveness of respiratory physiotherapy. Lung sounds provide useful, specific information, but standard auscultation is too subjective to allow them to be used as an outcome measure. Computer Aided Lung Sound Analysis (CALSA) is proposed as a new objective, non-invasive, bedside clinical measure with the potential to monitor and assess the effects of airway clearance therapy.
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Published date: 2006
Keywords:
lung sounds, outcome measures, physiotherapy
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 42993
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/42993
ISSN: 1083-3196
PURE UUID: 669c7e2f-562c-4743-b554-eeabe5e3e7cf
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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2007
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:02
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Author:
Alda Marques
Author:
Anne Bruton
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