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Managing Mobility After Stroke: Education Of Physiotherapists, Physiotherapy Students And Patients PDF

197 Pages·2015·8.85 MB·English
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Copyright and use of this thesis This thesis must be used in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1968. Reproduction of material protected by copyright may be an infringement of copyright and copyright owners may be entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. Section 51 (2) of the Copyright Act permits an authorized officer of a university library or archives to provide a copy (by communication or otherwise) of an unpublished thesis kept in the library or archives, to a person who satisfies the authorized officer that he or she requires the reproduction for the purposes of research or study. The Copyright Act grants the creator of a work a number of moral rights, specifically the right of attribution, the right against false attribution and the right of integrity. You may infringe the author’s moral rights if you: - fail to acknowledge the author of this thesis if you quote sections from the work - attribute this thesis to another author - subject this thesis to derogatory treatment which may prejudice the author’s reputation For further information contact the University’s Copyright Service. sydney.edu.au/copyright MANAGING MOBILITY AFTER STROKE: EDUCATION OF PHYSIOTHERAPISTS, PHYSIOTHERAPY STUDENTS AND PATIENTS Elisabeth Preston, MHlthSc (USyd) Thesis presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Faculty of Health Sciences The University of Sydney 2015 This is to certify that the thesis entitled “Managing mobility after stroke: Education of physiotherapists, physiotherapy students and patients” submitted by Elisabeth Preston in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy is in a form ready for examination. Signed Date 3rd June 2015 Dr Louise Ada School of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney. -i- TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE LIST OF FIGURES .................................................................................................... iv LIST OF TABLES ....................................................................................................... v ABSTRACT ................................................................................................................ vi STATEMENT OF AUTHORSHIP .......................................................................... viii PUBLICATIONS AND PRESENTATIONS ............................................................. ix ACKNOWLEDGMENTS .......................................................................................... xi CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION ......................................................................... 1 Rationale of the project ........................................................ 2 Increasing knowledge for clinicians about prognosis of walking after stroke ....................................... 6 Increasing skill of physiotherapy students in training walking after stroke .............................................. 12 Increasing physical activity in people after stroke ............. 19 Outline of the thesis ........................................................... 32 CHAPTER 2: STUDY 1: PROBABILITY OF NON-AMBULATORY PATIENTS AFTER STROKE REGAINING INDEPENDENT WALKING ..................................................... 34 Introduction ........................................................................ 35 Method ............................................................................... 36 Results ................................................................................ 40 Discussion .......................................................................... 51 CHAPTER 3: STUDY 2: PHYSIOTHERAPY ESKILLS TRAINING ONLINE ...................................................................................... 58 Introduction ........................................................................ 59 Method ............................................................................... 62 -ii- Results ................................................................................ 65 Discussion .......................................................................... 69 CHAPTER 4: STUDY 3: PROMOTING PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AFTER STROKE VIA SELF-MANAGEMENT: A FEASIBILITY STUDY .............................................................. 73 Introduction ........................................................................ 74 Method ............................................................................... 77 Results ................................................................................ 81 Discussion .......................................................................... 89 CHAPTER 5: DISCUSSION ............................................................................. 95 Summary of findings .......................................................... 96 Comparison with recent literature ...................................... 98 Implications for future research ....................................... 103 Implications for clinical practice ..................................... 107 Limitations of the studies ................................................ 109 Conclusion ....................................................................... 110 REFERENCES ......................................................................................................... 112 APPENDIX A ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS .............................................. 127 APPENDIX B MEASUREMENT .................................................................... 145 APPENDIX C EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES ......................................... 157 APPENDIX D INDIVIDUAL PARTICIPANT DATA STUDY 2 AND STUDY 3 .................................................................................. 165 APPENDIX E STATISTICS ............................................................................ 178 -iii- LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1.1 Information-motivation-behavioural skills model ......................... 24 Figure 1.2 Theory of planned behaviour ......................................................... 25 Figure 2.1 Inclusion criteria ............................................................................ 37 Figure 2.2 Flow of studies through the review ............................................... 41 Figure 2.3 Probability (95% CI) of patients after stroke who are initially non-ambulatory regaining independent walking at 3 months when managed in a rehabilitation unit by pooling data from 9 studies (n=1373) ............................................ 48 Figure 2.4 Probability (95% CI) of patients after stroke who are initially non-ambulatory regaining independent walking at 6 months when managed in a rehabilitation unit by pooling data from 3 studies (n=444) .............................................. 48 Figure 2.5 Probability (95% CI) of patients after stroke who are initially non-ambulatory regaining independent walking at 3 months when managed in an acute unit by pooling data from 5 studies (n=634) ................................................................... 50 Figure 2.6 Probability (95% CI) of patients after stroke who are initially non-ambulatory regaining independent walking at 6 months when managed in a rehabilitation unit by pooling data from 2 studies (n=405) .............................................. 50 Figure 2.7 The probability of patients after stroke who are initially non-ambulatory regaining independent walking and managed in a rehabilitation unit and an acute unit ........................ 52 Figure 3.1 The Physiotherapy eSkills Training Online menu page where students can select the specific practical skill. .................... 60 Figure 3.2 The webpage for an individual practical skill from The Physiotherapy eSkills Training Online resource, highlighting the demonstration video, and including menu buttons for the Aim and Rationale, Equipment, Key Points, Common Errors, Progression and Variety, and a Downloadable PDF. ....................................................................... 60 Figure 3.3 Design and flow of participants through the trial .......................... 66 Figure 4.1 Flow of participants through the trial ............................................ 82 -iv- LIST OF TABLES Table 1.1 Summary of prognostic studies of non-ambulatory stroke survivors on walking outcomes ....................................................... 7 Table 1.2 Summary of prognostic studies of ambulatory and non- ambulatory stroke survivors on walking outcomes ......................... 9 Table 1.3 Definitions of 26 behaviour change techniques and illustrative theoretical frameworks ................................................ 27 Table 2.1 Quality of included studies ............................................................ 42 Table 2.2 Summary of included studies ......................................................... 43 Table 2.3 Summary of excluded studies ........................................................ 45 Table 3.1 Characteristics of participants ........................................................ 67 Table 3.2 Mean (SD) of practical examination marks for each group and difference (95% CI) between groups ...................................... 68 Table 4.1 Characteristics of participants ........................................................ 83 Table 4.2 Feasibility and adverse events ....................................................... 84 Table 4.3 Participants’ perception, mean (SD) .............................................. 85 Table 4.4 Number and % of participants completing 30 min/day of moderate activity for each group, and mean (95% CI) risk difference ....................................................................................... 87 Table 4.5 Mean (SD) outcome for each group, mean (SD) within- group difference and mean (95% CI) between-group difference ....................................................................................... 88 Table 5.1 Summary of studies which examine predictive factors for outcome after stroke .................................................................... 104 -v- ABSTRACT Stroke is a major cause of disability worldwide. Poor mobility, specifically the inability to walk and low levels of physical activity, as a result of stroke, leads to decreased participation in the community, reduced quality of life and increased risk of recurrent stroke. The aim of this thesis, therefore, was to enhance mobility outcomes after stroke by facilitating education of physiotherapists, physiotherapy students and stroke survivors. Specifically, this thesis aimed to increase knowledge of physiotherapists about walking outcome after stroke; increase physiotherapy student skills in training walking after stroke; and finally increase physical activity in stroke survivors via self-management. Study 1 was a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies which examined the likelihood of regaining independent walking in stroke survivors who were initially non-ambulant. It determined the likelihood of non-ambulatory stroke survivors regaining independent walking at 3-months, 6-months and 12-months, in both acute and rehabilitation units. This study found that 60% of initially non-ambulatory stroke survivors managed in a rehabilitation unit regained independent walking at 3 months and this increased to 65% by 6 months after stroke. In an acute unit only 39% of initially non-ambulatory stroke survivors regained independent walking at 3- months. This increased to 69% at 6 months after stroke. Study 2 was a controlled study examining the effectiveness of e-learning in teaching physiotherapy students the practical skills related to training walking after stroke. It compared e-learning as an adjunct to usual teaching, with usual teaching alone. The results indicated that e-learning improved physiotherapy students’ ability to implement practical skills effectively, as well as their ability to provide a rationale for the practical skill. Students also perceived the e-learning resource to be very useful for learning the practical skills related to rehabilitation of walking after stroke. -vi- Study 3 was a single-group Phase I feasibility study. It investigated whether a 3- month, home-based, self-management program was feasible and potentially effective for increasing physical activity after mild stroke. Self-management was found to be a feasible strategy for increasing physical activity. The results also suggested that self-management can increase the proportion of participants who complete 30 min/day of moderate activity, as well as the average amount of time spent in moderate physical activity/day. Self-management can also improve self-efficacy for exercise, walking ability, participation and quality of life, but cardiovascular risks were unchanged. A majority of people regain the ability to walk after stroke, but there is still scope to improve this outcome by implementing effective walking interventions, and to further enhance mobility by increasing the amount of physical activity completed by stroke survivors. Physiotherapists should utilise the increased knowledge regarding prognosis of walking after stroke to provide early and accurate education and goal setting for patients, and to more effectively allocate resources during stroke rehabilitation. Physiotherapists working in higher education should consider the use of e-learning as an adjunct to usual teaching, to enhance learning of the practical skills related to training walking after stroke in physiotherapy students. Finally, educating and empowering stroke survivors themselves, via self-management, may be a promising strategy for increasing physical activity, and optimising mobility after stroke, therefore should be further investigated. -vii- I, ELISABETH PRESTON, hereby declare that the work contained within this thesis is my own and has not been submitted to any other university or institution as a part or a whole requirement for any higher degree. In addition, ethical approval from the University of Sydney Human Ethics Committee was granted for the second and third studies presented in this thesis. Participants were required to read a participant information document and informed consent was gained prior to data collection. Name Elisabeth Preston Signed Date 3rd June 2015 -viii-

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implement practical skills effectively, as well as their ability to provide a rationale International Journal of Conference Abstracts: National Australian Physiotherapy systematic review” ACT APA symposium, Canberra, 2011.
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