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Perspectives on barriers to use and benefits of functional electrical stimulation from Australians and New Zealanders with SCI and clinicians and researchers in the field

Perspectives on barriers to use and benefits of functional electrical stimulation from Australians and New Zealanders with SCI and clinicians and researchers in the field
Perspectives on barriers to use and benefits of functional electrical stimulation from Australians and New Zealanders with SCI and clinicians and researchers in the field
Objectives: to document, through a survey, perceptions of functional electrical stimulation (FES) from people with spinal cord injury (SCI) and carers, clinicians, and researchers (CCR).

Methods: online questionnaires were completed in Australia and New Zealand from December 1, 2021 to August 31, 2022. Subgroups included people with SCI who have used FES, people with SCI who have not used FES, CCRs who have used FES, and CCRs who have not used FES. Frequencies and percentages of subgroup data were calculated for all questions. Open-ended responses were analyzed with inductive content analysis.

Results: ninety-nine responses (70 people with SCI, 29 CCR) were analyzed. Out of the 99 responses, 47 people with SCI and 27 CCRs had used or currently use FES. Muscle strength was the most frequently reported benefit by people with SCI and CCRs who use(d) FES. Lack of training was the most frequently reported barrier to FES by people with SCI (85% of question responders) and CCRs (94%) who had used FES. People with SCI (95%) who had not used FES reported access as a barrier. The leading priorities for future research include improved ease of use for people with SCI (60% people with SCI) and clinical guidelines (48% CCR). Qualitative findings supported the quantitative findings.

Conclusion: this survey identified access as a barrier to FES and echoed benefits (strength) and barriers (training) reported in previous research. Ameliorating the barriers and investigating the areas of future research identified in this study will ultimately improve FES uptake in SCI rehabilitation.



consumer perspective, functional electrical stimulation, rehabilitation technology, spinal cord injury
1082-0744
100-112
Palermo, Anne E.
0755bd60-aa41-4b20-8a77-59c12eb71ae9
Gordon, Edward S.
831ff099-2a34-475d-a645-2145bb1a0426
Vecchio, Antonio
c94e5637-7e4c-4b37-bbd3-833976536f0f
Tedesco Triccas, Lisa
1b67fe24-db14-451e-b533-45d69fa887f4
McCaughey, Euan
9a39784b-7c29-4e33-9716-e6de9a9c1e9c
Donovan-Hall, Maggie
5f138055-2162-4982-846c-5c92411055e0
Palermo, Anne E.
0755bd60-aa41-4b20-8a77-59c12eb71ae9
Gordon, Edward S.
831ff099-2a34-475d-a645-2145bb1a0426
Vecchio, Antonio
c94e5637-7e4c-4b37-bbd3-833976536f0f
Tedesco Triccas, Lisa
1b67fe24-db14-451e-b533-45d69fa887f4
McCaughey, Euan
9a39784b-7c29-4e33-9716-e6de9a9c1e9c
Donovan-Hall, Maggie
5f138055-2162-4982-846c-5c92411055e0

Palermo, Anne E., Gordon, Edward S., Vecchio, Antonio, Tedesco Triccas, Lisa, McCaughey, Euan and Donovan-Hall, Maggie (2025) Perspectives on barriers to use and benefits of functional electrical stimulation from Australians and New Zealanders with SCI and clinicians and researchers in the field. Topics in Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation, 31 (1), 100-112. (doi:10.46292/sci24-00013).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: to document, through a survey, perceptions of functional electrical stimulation (FES) from people with spinal cord injury (SCI) and carers, clinicians, and researchers (CCR).

Methods: online questionnaires were completed in Australia and New Zealand from December 1, 2021 to August 31, 2022. Subgroups included people with SCI who have used FES, people with SCI who have not used FES, CCRs who have used FES, and CCRs who have not used FES. Frequencies and percentages of subgroup data were calculated for all questions. Open-ended responses were analyzed with inductive content analysis.

Results: ninety-nine responses (70 people with SCI, 29 CCR) were analyzed. Out of the 99 responses, 47 people with SCI and 27 CCRs had used or currently use FES. Muscle strength was the most frequently reported benefit by people with SCI and CCRs who use(d) FES. Lack of training was the most frequently reported barrier to FES by people with SCI (85% of question responders) and CCRs (94%) who had used FES. People with SCI (95%) who had not used FES reported access as a barrier. The leading priorities for future research include improved ease of use for people with SCI (60% people with SCI) and clinical guidelines (48% CCR). Qualitative findings supported the quantitative findings.

Conclusion: this survey identified access as a barrier to FES and echoed benefits (strength) and barriers (training) reported in previous research. Ameliorating the barriers and investigating the areas of future research identified in this study will ultimately improve FES uptake in SCI rehabilitation.



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FES Survey Manuscript TSCIR.revised - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 14 February 2025
Keywords: consumer perspective, functional electrical stimulation, rehabilitation technology, spinal cord injury

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500092
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500092
ISSN: 1082-0744
PURE UUID: 8cb66940-5aac-48be-baa0-5141bef7cce2

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Date deposited: 15 Apr 2025 16:55
Last modified: 15 Apr 2025 16:55

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Contributors

Author: Anne E. Palermo
Author: Edward S. Gordon
Author: Antonio Vecchio
Author: Lisa Tedesco Triccas
Author: Euan McCaughey

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