J. Richardson, L. Letts, D. Chan, P. Stratford, C. Hand, D. Price, Linda Hilts, L. Coman, M. Edwards, S. Baptiste, M. Law
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A rehabilitation multi-component intervention was delivered by a physiotherapist (PT) and occupational therapist in a primary care setting and included collaborative goal setting for rehabilitation needs, a six-week chronic disease self-management (SM) workshop, referral to community programs and a web-based education programme. Findings Three hundred and three patients participated, n = 152 intervention group and n = 151 in the control group. There was a significant difference between the groups for planned hospital days (F = 6.3, P = 0.00) with an adjusted difference 0.60 day per person, and increased satisfaction with rehabilitation services however no difference on health status or emergency room visits. This rehabilitation intervention which had a strong SM component prevented planned hospitalizations that resulted in a conservative estimated cost saving from reduced hospitalizations of $65 000. Future research needs to examine which patient groups with chronic illness show positive responses to rehabilitation and self-management.","PeriodicalId":20471,"journal":{"name":"Primary Health Care Research & Development","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-06-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"38","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Rehabilitation in a primary care setting for persons with chronic illness – a randomized controlled trial\",\"authors\":\"J. Richardson, L. Letts, D. Chan, P. Stratford, C. Hand, D. Price, Linda Hilts, L. Coman, M. Edwards, S. Baptiste, M. Law\",\"doi\":\"10.1017/S1463423610000113\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Aim The primary objective of this study was to determine whether adults with a chronic illness within a primary care setting who received a rehabilitation intervention in this setting showed greater improvement in health status and had fewer hospital admissions and emergency room visits compared with adults who do not receive the intervention. Background More than half of Canadians (16 million people) live with chronic illness. Persons with chronic illness in primary care, especially older persons who are most at risk for functional decline, are currently not receiving effective management. Methods A randomized controlled trial was used. A rehabilitation multi-component intervention was delivered by a physiotherapist (PT) and occupational therapist in a primary care setting and included collaborative goal setting for rehabilitation needs, a six-week chronic disease self-management (SM) workshop, referral to community programs and a web-based education programme. Findings Three hundred and three patients participated, n = 152 intervention group and n = 151 in the control group. There was a significant difference between the groups for planned hospital days (F = 6.3, P = 0.00) with an adjusted difference 0.60 day per person, and increased satisfaction with rehabilitation services however no difference on health status or emergency room visits. This rehabilitation intervention which had a strong SM component prevented planned hospitalizations that resulted in a conservative estimated cost saving from reduced hospitalizations of $65 000. 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引用次数: 38
摘要
目的:本研究的主要目的是确定在初级保健机构接受康复干预的慢性疾病成人是否比未接受干预的成人表现出更大的健康状况改善,住院和急诊室就诊次数更少。超过一半的加拿大人(1600万人)患有慢性疾病。初级保健中的慢性病患者,特别是最有可能出现功能衰退的老年人,目前没有得到有效的管理。方法采用随机对照试验。康复多成分干预由初级保健环境中的物理治疗师(PT)和职业治疗师提供,包括针对康复需求的协作目标设定,为期六周的慢性疾病自我管理(SM)研讨会,转介到社区项目和基于网络的教育项目。结果共有303例患者参与,干预组152例,对照组151例。两组间计划住院天数差异显著(F = 6.3, P = 0.00),调整后差异为0.60天/人,康复服务满意度增加,但健康状况和急诊就诊次数无差异。这种康复干预措施具有很强的SM成分,可防止计划住院,保守估计减少住院费用可节省65000美元。未来的研究需要检查哪些慢性疾病患者群体对康复和自我管理表现出积极的反应。
Rehabilitation in a primary care setting for persons with chronic illness – a randomized controlled trial
Aim The primary objective of this study was to determine whether adults with a chronic illness within a primary care setting who received a rehabilitation intervention in this setting showed greater improvement in health status and had fewer hospital admissions and emergency room visits compared with adults who do not receive the intervention. Background More than half of Canadians (16 million people) live with chronic illness. Persons with chronic illness in primary care, especially older persons who are most at risk for functional decline, are currently not receiving effective management. Methods A randomized controlled trial was used. A rehabilitation multi-component intervention was delivered by a physiotherapist (PT) and occupational therapist in a primary care setting and included collaborative goal setting for rehabilitation needs, a six-week chronic disease self-management (SM) workshop, referral to community programs and a web-based education programme. Findings Three hundred and three patients participated, n = 152 intervention group and n = 151 in the control group. There was a significant difference between the groups for planned hospital days (F = 6.3, P = 0.00) with an adjusted difference 0.60 day per person, and increased satisfaction with rehabilitation services however no difference on health status or emergency room visits. This rehabilitation intervention which had a strong SM component prevented planned hospitalizations that resulted in a conservative estimated cost saving from reduced hospitalizations of $65 000. Future research needs to examine which patient groups with chronic illness show positive responses to rehabilitation and self-management.