The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Rehabilitation aimed at improving outdoor mobility for people after stroke: a multicentre randomized controlled study (the getting out of the house study)

Rehabilitation aimed at improving outdoor mobility for people after stroke: a multicentre randomized controlled study (the getting out of the house study)
Rehabilitation aimed at improving outdoor mobility for people after stroke: a multicentre randomized controlled study (the getting out of the house study)
Background: one-third of stroke patients are dependent on others to get outside their homes. This can cause people to become housebound, leading to increased immobility, poor health, isolation and misery. There is some evidence that outdoor mobility rehabilitation can reduce these limitations.

Objective: to test the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an outdoor mobility rehabilitation intervention for stroke patients.

Design: multicentre, parallel-group randomised controlled trial, with two groups allocated at a 1 : 1 ratio plus qualitative participant interviews.

Setting: fifteen UK NHS stroke services throughout England, Scotland and Wales.

Participants: a total of 568 stroke patients who wished to get out of the house more often, mean age of 71 years: 508 reached the 6-month follow-up and 10 were interviewed.

Intervention: control was delivered prior to randomisation to all participants, and consisted of verbal advice and transport and outdoor mobility leaflets. Intervention was a targeted outdoor mobility rehabilitation programme delivered by 29 NHS therapists to 287 randomly chosen participants for up to 12 sessions over 4 months.

Main outcome measures: primary outcome was participant health-related quality of life, measured by the Short Form questionnaire-36 items, version 2 (Social Function domain), 6 months after baseline. Secondary outcomes were functional ability, mobility, number of journeys (from monthly travel diaries), satisfaction with outdoor mobility (SWOM), psychological well-being and resource use [health care and Personal Social Services (PSS)] 6 months after baseline. Carer well-being was recorded. All outcome measures were collected by post and repeated 12 months after baseline. Outcomes for the groups were compared using statistical significance testing and adjusted for multiple membership to account for the effect of multiple therapists at different sites. Interviews were analysed using interpretive phenomenology to explore confidence.

Results: a median of seven intervention sessions [interquartile range (IQR) 3–7 sessions], median duration of 369 minutes (IQR 170–691.5 minutes) per participant was delivered. There was no significant difference between the groups on health-related quality of life (social function). There were no significant differences between groups in functional ability, psychological well-being or SWOM at 6- or 12-month follow-ups. There was a significant difference observed for travel journeys with the intervention group being 42% more likely to make a journey compared with the control group [rate ratio 1.42, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.14 to 1.67] at 6 months and 76% more likely (rate ratio 1.76, 95% CI 1.36 to 1.95) at 12 months. The number of journeys was affected by the therapist effect. The mean incremental cost (total NHS and PSS cost) of the intervention was £3413.75 (95% CI –£448.43 to £7121.00), with an incremental quality-adjusted life-year gain of –0.027 (95% CI –0.060 to 0.007) according to the European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions and –0.003 (95% CI –0.016 to 0.006) according to the Short Form questionnaire-6 Dimensions. At baseline, 259 out of 281 (92.2%) participants in the control group were dissatisfied with outdoor mobility but at the 6-month assessment this had reduced to 77.7% (181/233), a 15% reduction. The corresponding reduction in the intervention group was slightly greater (21%) than 268 out of 287 (93.4%) participants dissatisfied with outdoor mobility at baseline to 189 out of 261 (72.4%) at 6 months. Participants described losing confidence after stroke as being detrimental to outdoor mobility. Recruitment and retention rates were high. The intervention was deliverable by the NHS but had a neutral effect in all areas apart from potentially increasing the number of journeys. This was dependent on the therapist effect, meaning that some therapists were more successful than others. The control appeared to affect change.

Conclusions: the outdoor mobility intervention provided in this study to these stroke patients was not clinically effective or cost-effective. However, the provision of personalised information and monthly diaries should be considered for all people who wish to get out more.

Trial registration: current Controlled Trials ISRCTN58683841.
1366-5278
Logan, Philippa A.
af94e8ce-24d1-49f9-8d06-e43a2888557d
Armstrong, Sarah
6ffe7027-43b4-412f-9768-5c3bf20a24e3
Avery, Tony J.
e19fcde0-36ba-4164-8683-eeec40095fb7
Barer, David
2d325ac3-6085-41bb-9ce7-37b0f53f6d49
Barton, Gary R.
bf3455b3-9bee-4af6-94e8-930b2a383b33
Darby, Janet
66673b40-41fb-4a3c-924d-ca976008f118
Gladman, John R.F.
89788999-01d4-4bd1-adb0-d96b68f2f270
Horne, Jane
5ce42dd1-d9ab-41e5-9b77-ad14db635667
Leach, Simon
6bd55fb6-3cdd-4b1b-914b-06f8270b687c
Lincoln, Nadina B.
dcb568cc-8bc4-4aa4-ab7b-066fd5f1d8b0
Mehta, Samir
ca7f9a65-39c0-4c23-a1cb-5610be044b29
Newell, Ossie
f19c5424-fc33-48fc-a247-a2ebbe641b99
O'Neil, Kathleen
44968f62-6d7a-46ac-bf1e-ff7bc61722fa
Sach, Tracey H.
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Walker, Marion F.
5beae64c-40b3-4a9b-a67f-b5fb293235a3
Williams, Hywel C.
75f9b08a-e974-4f11-99d2-efd2a27f5d22
Woodhouse, Lisa J.
4574e606-ab3b-4b47-b3e4-70bc924a7f9f
Leighton, Mat P.
804af499-2c57-4ab3-bf4e-dbe24164431b
Logan, Philippa A.
af94e8ce-24d1-49f9-8d06-e43a2888557d
Armstrong, Sarah
6ffe7027-43b4-412f-9768-5c3bf20a24e3
Avery, Tony J.
e19fcde0-36ba-4164-8683-eeec40095fb7
Barer, David
2d325ac3-6085-41bb-9ce7-37b0f53f6d49
Barton, Gary R.
bf3455b3-9bee-4af6-94e8-930b2a383b33
Darby, Janet
66673b40-41fb-4a3c-924d-ca976008f118
Gladman, John R.F.
89788999-01d4-4bd1-adb0-d96b68f2f270
Horne, Jane
5ce42dd1-d9ab-41e5-9b77-ad14db635667
Leach, Simon
6bd55fb6-3cdd-4b1b-914b-06f8270b687c
Lincoln, Nadina B.
dcb568cc-8bc4-4aa4-ab7b-066fd5f1d8b0
Mehta, Samir
ca7f9a65-39c0-4c23-a1cb-5610be044b29
Newell, Ossie
f19c5424-fc33-48fc-a247-a2ebbe641b99
O'Neil, Kathleen
44968f62-6d7a-46ac-bf1e-ff7bc61722fa
Sach, Tracey H.
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Walker, Marion F.
5beae64c-40b3-4a9b-a67f-b5fb293235a3
Williams, Hywel C.
75f9b08a-e974-4f11-99d2-efd2a27f5d22
Woodhouse, Lisa J.
4574e606-ab3b-4b47-b3e4-70bc924a7f9f
Leighton, Mat P.
804af499-2c57-4ab3-bf4e-dbe24164431b

Logan, Philippa A., Armstrong, Sarah, Avery, Tony J., Barer, David, Barton, Gary R., Darby, Janet, Gladman, John R.F., Horne, Jane, Leach, Simon, Lincoln, Nadina B., Mehta, Samir, Newell, Ossie, O'Neil, Kathleen, Sach, Tracey H., Walker, Marion F., Williams, Hywel C., Woodhouse, Lisa J. and Leighton, Mat P. (2014) Rehabilitation aimed at improving outdoor mobility for people after stroke: a multicentre randomized controlled study (the getting out of the house study). Health Technology Assessment, 18 (29). (doi:10.3310/hta18290).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: one-third of stroke patients are dependent on others to get outside their homes. This can cause people to become housebound, leading to increased immobility, poor health, isolation and misery. There is some evidence that outdoor mobility rehabilitation can reduce these limitations.

Objective: to test the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an outdoor mobility rehabilitation intervention for stroke patients.

Design: multicentre, parallel-group randomised controlled trial, with two groups allocated at a 1 : 1 ratio plus qualitative participant interviews.

Setting: fifteen UK NHS stroke services throughout England, Scotland and Wales.

Participants: a total of 568 stroke patients who wished to get out of the house more often, mean age of 71 years: 508 reached the 6-month follow-up and 10 were interviewed.

Intervention: control was delivered prior to randomisation to all participants, and consisted of verbal advice and transport and outdoor mobility leaflets. Intervention was a targeted outdoor mobility rehabilitation programme delivered by 29 NHS therapists to 287 randomly chosen participants for up to 12 sessions over 4 months.

Main outcome measures: primary outcome was participant health-related quality of life, measured by the Short Form questionnaire-36 items, version 2 (Social Function domain), 6 months after baseline. Secondary outcomes were functional ability, mobility, number of journeys (from monthly travel diaries), satisfaction with outdoor mobility (SWOM), psychological well-being and resource use [health care and Personal Social Services (PSS)] 6 months after baseline. Carer well-being was recorded. All outcome measures were collected by post and repeated 12 months after baseline. Outcomes for the groups were compared using statistical significance testing and adjusted for multiple membership to account for the effect of multiple therapists at different sites. Interviews were analysed using interpretive phenomenology to explore confidence.

Results: a median of seven intervention sessions [interquartile range (IQR) 3–7 sessions], median duration of 369 minutes (IQR 170–691.5 minutes) per participant was delivered. There was no significant difference between the groups on health-related quality of life (social function). There were no significant differences between groups in functional ability, psychological well-being or SWOM at 6- or 12-month follow-ups. There was a significant difference observed for travel journeys with the intervention group being 42% more likely to make a journey compared with the control group [rate ratio 1.42, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.14 to 1.67] at 6 months and 76% more likely (rate ratio 1.76, 95% CI 1.36 to 1.95) at 12 months. The number of journeys was affected by the therapist effect. The mean incremental cost (total NHS and PSS cost) of the intervention was £3413.75 (95% CI –£448.43 to £7121.00), with an incremental quality-adjusted life-year gain of –0.027 (95% CI –0.060 to 0.007) according to the European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions and –0.003 (95% CI –0.016 to 0.006) according to the Short Form questionnaire-6 Dimensions. At baseline, 259 out of 281 (92.2%) participants in the control group were dissatisfied with outdoor mobility but at the 6-month assessment this had reduced to 77.7% (181/233), a 15% reduction. The corresponding reduction in the intervention group was slightly greater (21%) than 268 out of 287 (93.4%) participants dissatisfied with outdoor mobility at baseline to 189 out of 261 (72.4%) at 6 months. Participants described losing confidence after stroke as being detrimental to outdoor mobility. Recruitment and retention rates were high. The intervention was deliverable by the NHS but had a neutral effect in all areas apart from potentially increasing the number of journeys. This was dependent on the therapist effect, meaning that some therapists were more successful than others. The control appeared to affect change.

Conclusions: the outdoor mobility intervention provided in this study to these stroke patients was not clinically effective or cost-effective. However, the provision of personalised information and monthly diaries should be considered for all people who wish to get out more.

Trial registration: current Controlled Trials ISRCTN58683841.

Text
3002528 - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (1MB)

More information

e-pub ahead of print date: May 2014

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478159
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478159
ISSN: 1366-5278
PURE UUID: 9d8577ea-1088-42b4-aa4c-72e1b1aad6df
ORCID for Tracey H. Sach: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8098-9220

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Jun 2023 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:19

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Philippa A. Logan
Author: Sarah Armstrong
Author: Tony J. Avery
Author: David Barer
Author: Gary R. Barton
Author: Janet Darby
Author: John R.F. Gladman
Author: Jane Horne
Author: Simon Leach
Author: Nadina B. Lincoln
Author: Samir Mehta
Author: Ossie Newell
Author: Kathleen O'Neil
Author: Tracey H. Sach ORCID iD
Author: Marion F. Walker
Author: Hywel C. Williams
Author: Lisa J. Woodhouse
Author: Mat P. Leighton

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×