Feasibility and effectiveness of providing vestibular rehabilitation for dizzy patients in the community
Feasibility and effectiveness of providing vestibular rehabilitation for dizzy patients in the community
Since the majority of people with dizziness in the community are never referred for specialist testing and treatment, the purpose of this study was to investigate whether it was desirable and feasible to provide vestibular rehabilitation for this patient population. Demand for therapy was assessed by a survey of 9198 working age people randomly sampled from six general practices. One in 10 respondents reported current, handicapping dizziness, but fewer than 2% of those with dizziness severe enough to merit treatment proved suitable and willing to attend hospital for testing and rehabilitation. Nevertheless, vestibular rehabilitation was clearly beneficial for the 16 patients who completed the therapy programme, as their scores on measures of symptoms, disability, handicap and postural stability improved significantly post-therapy to near-normal levels. We conclude that there is a need for provision of vestibular rehabilitation in primary care for patients with dizziness in the community.
Dizziness, Rehabilitation, Therapy, Treatment, Vertigo, Vestibular
442-448
Yardley, L.
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Burgneay, J.
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Andersson, G.
fa7db26e-e25c-430a-9589-fc5276723327
Owen, N.
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Nazareth, I.
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Luxon, L.
cc03a04c-70b3-424c-8fc5-fe04aa1c1a8e
1 January 1998
Yardley, L.
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Burgneay, J.
ac6d5fe8-42e2-4dee-b4ba-cf9047a3a4cb
Andersson, G.
fa7db26e-e25c-430a-9589-fc5276723327
Owen, N.
b2c1bc9c-112f-404b-9fc8-a5f7a0987ed4
Nazareth, I.
7272539e-1090-4a10-9421-9d7afd68c568
Luxon, L.
cc03a04c-70b3-424c-8fc5-fe04aa1c1a8e
Yardley, L., Burgneay, J., Andersson, G., Owen, N., Nazareth, I. and Luxon, L.
(1998)
Feasibility and effectiveness of providing vestibular rehabilitation for dizzy patients in the community.
Clinical Otolaryngology and Allied Sciences, 23 (5), .
(doi:10.1046/j.1365-2273.1998.00179.x).
Abstract
Since the majority of people with dizziness in the community are never referred for specialist testing and treatment, the purpose of this study was to investigate whether it was desirable and feasible to provide vestibular rehabilitation for this patient population. Demand for therapy was assessed by a survey of 9198 working age people randomly sampled from six general practices. One in 10 respondents reported current, handicapping dizziness, but fewer than 2% of those with dizziness severe enough to merit treatment proved suitable and willing to attend hospital for testing and rehabilitation. Nevertheless, vestibular rehabilitation was clearly beneficial for the 16 patients who completed the therapy programme, as their scores on measures of symptoms, disability, handicap and postural stability improved significantly post-therapy to near-normal levels. We conclude that there is a need for provision of vestibular rehabilitation in primary care for patients with dizziness in the community.
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Published date: 1 January 1998
Keywords:
Dizziness, Rehabilitation, Therapy, Treatment, Vertigo, Vestibular
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Local EPrints ID: 509366
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509366
ISSN: 0307-7772
PURE UUID: 5796a4ee-970d-41ca-906d-b37e977fda4d
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Date deposited: 19 Feb 2026 17:50
Last modified: 20 Feb 2026 02:36
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Author:
J. Burgneay
Author:
G. Andersson
Author:
N. Owen
Author:
I. Nazareth
Author:
L. Luxon
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