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Telerehabilitation for people with physical disabilities and movement impairment: A survey of United Kingdom practitioners (Preprint)

Telerehabilitation for people with physical disabilities and movement impairment: A survey of United Kingdom practitioners (Preprint)
Telerehabilitation for people with physical disabilities and movement impairment: A survey of United Kingdom practitioners (Preprint)
Background:

Telerehabilitation is a feasible and potentially effective alternative to in-person rehabilitation. However, specific guidance, training and support for practitioners who undertake remote assessments in people with physical disabilities and movement impairment is limited.

Objective:

The aims of this survey of United Kingdom (UK) based health and social care practitioners were to explore experiences, assess training needs, and collate ideas on best practice in telerehabilitation for physical disabilities and movement impairment. The ultimate aim will be to use the findings to inform a practical toolkit and training package for telerehabilitation use.

Methods:

UK rehabilitation practitioners were invited to complete an online questionnaire in November to December 2020. Opportunity and snowball sampling were used to recruit participants from professional and educational networks, special interest groups and via social media. Closed questionnaire items were analysed using descriptive statistics. Qualitative inductive analysis using NVivo was used for free text responses.

Results:

There were 247 respondents, of which 177 (72%) were physiotherapists and occupational therapists. Most (n = 207, 84%) had used video-based consultations, typically supported by telephone and e-mail. Practitioners perceived telerehabilitation positively overall, and recognised benefits for patients including reduced infection risk, convenience and flexibility, and reduced travel and fatigue. Common obstacles were: technology-related (e.g. internet connection); practical (e.g. difficulty positioning the camera); patient-related (e.g. health status); practitioner-related (e.g. lack of technical skills); and organisational (e.g. lack of access to technology). Support from family members or carers was a major facilitator for successful remote consultations. Of the 207 respondents who had used video-based consultations, 103 (50%) had assessed physical impairments using this method, 107 (52%) had assessed physical function, and 121 (59%) had used patient-reported outcome measures. Although practitioners generally felt confident in delivering video-based consultations, they were less confident in undertaking remote physical assessments. They expressed concerns about the validity, reliability and safety of physical assessments carried out remotely. Only 46 of the 247 respondents (19%) had received any training in telerehabilitation or video consultations, with some commenting that they were “feeling their way in the dark”. Practitioners desired training and guidance on: physical assessment tools suitable for remote use; when to use video-based consultations or alternative methods; and governance issues. They also wanted guidance on digital platforms and signposting to digital skills training for themselves and their patients.

Conclusions:

In response to the COVID pandemic, practitioners rapidly adopted telerehabilitation for people with physical disabilities and movement impairment. However, there are technical, practical and organisational obstacles to overcome, and a clear need for improved guidance and training in remote physical assessments. The findings of this survey will inform the development of a toolkit of resources and training package for the current and future workforce in telerehabilitation.
Buckingham, Sarah Ann
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Anil, Krithika
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Demain, Sara
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Gunn, Hilary
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Jones, Ray B
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Kent, Bridie
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Logan, Angela
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Marsden, Jonathan
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Playford, E Diane
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Freeman, Jenny
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Buckingham, Sarah Ann
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Anil, Krithika
2b2690a5-37f4-4b3e-9b4c-df721d12a2f3
Demain, Sara
09b1124d-750a-4eb1-90c7-91f5f222fc31
Gunn, Hilary
2f6d03a5-20b5-431f-8f64-596e511ad4f5
Jones, Ray B
b96fe4b3-7405-4b67-8154-68647a59491f
Kent, Bridie
9a16161a-c0a4-4a2d-a1da-47ab54241c34
Logan, Angela
d97cd7e2-8a12-4f30-9528-553c09b244c3
Marsden, Jonathan
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Playford, E Diane
51707e0d-5490-4d2f-99cc-cd6297464d61
Freeman, Jenny
5416ebd6-edff-4f7b-8b6a-bbc653f46078

Buckingham, Sarah Ann, Anil, Krithika, Demain, Sara, Gunn, Hilary, Jones, Ray B, Kent, Bridie, Logan, Angela, Marsden, Jonathan, Playford, E Diane and Freeman, Jenny (2021) Telerehabilitation for people with physical disabilities and movement impairment: A survey of United Kingdom practitioners (Preprint). JMIRx Med. (doi:10.2196/30516). (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background:

Telerehabilitation is a feasible and potentially effective alternative to in-person rehabilitation. However, specific guidance, training and support for practitioners who undertake remote assessments in people with physical disabilities and movement impairment is limited.

Objective:

The aims of this survey of United Kingdom (UK) based health and social care practitioners were to explore experiences, assess training needs, and collate ideas on best practice in telerehabilitation for physical disabilities and movement impairment. The ultimate aim will be to use the findings to inform a practical toolkit and training package for telerehabilitation use.

Methods:

UK rehabilitation practitioners were invited to complete an online questionnaire in November to December 2020. Opportunity and snowball sampling were used to recruit participants from professional and educational networks, special interest groups and via social media. Closed questionnaire items were analysed using descriptive statistics. Qualitative inductive analysis using NVivo was used for free text responses.

Results:

There were 247 respondents, of which 177 (72%) were physiotherapists and occupational therapists. Most (n = 207, 84%) had used video-based consultations, typically supported by telephone and e-mail. Practitioners perceived telerehabilitation positively overall, and recognised benefits for patients including reduced infection risk, convenience and flexibility, and reduced travel and fatigue. Common obstacles were: technology-related (e.g. internet connection); practical (e.g. difficulty positioning the camera); patient-related (e.g. health status); practitioner-related (e.g. lack of technical skills); and organisational (e.g. lack of access to technology). Support from family members or carers was a major facilitator for successful remote consultations. Of the 207 respondents who had used video-based consultations, 103 (50%) had assessed physical impairments using this method, 107 (52%) had assessed physical function, and 121 (59%) had used patient-reported outcome measures. Although practitioners generally felt confident in delivering video-based consultations, they were less confident in undertaking remote physical assessments. They expressed concerns about the validity, reliability and safety of physical assessments carried out remotely. Only 46 of the 247 respondents (19%) had received any training in telerehabilitation or video consultations, with some commenting that they were “feeling their way in the dark”. Practitioners desired training and guidance on: physical assessment tools suitable for remote use; when to use video-based consultations or alternative methods; and governance issues. They also wanted guidance on digital platforms and signposting to digital skills training for themselves and their patients.

Conclusions:

In response to the COVID pandemic, practitioners rapidly adopted telerehabilitation for people with physical disabilities and movement impairment. However, there are technical, practical and organisational obstacles to overcome, and a clear need for improved guidance and training in remote physical assessments. The findings of this survey will inform the development of a toolkit of resources and training package for the current and future workforce in telerehabilitation.

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 October 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452638
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452638
PURE UUID: 14e92ac7-6274-43be-802d-6c4feac6201c
ORCID for Krithika Anil: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8027-1665

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 11:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 14:40

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Contributors

Author: Sarah Ann Buckingham
Author: Krithika Anil ORCID iD
Author: Sara Demain
Author: Hilary Gunn
Author: Ray B Jones
Author: Bridie Kent
Author: Angela Logan
Author: Jonathan Marsden
Author: E Diane Playford
Author: Jenny Freeman

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