Effects of Tele-Rehabilitation Compared with Home-Based in-Person Rehabilitation for Older Adult’s Function after Hip Fracture
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Ortiz Piña, Mariana; Martín Martín, Lydia María; Ariza Vega, María Patrocinio; Femia Marzo, Pedro Jesús; Salas Fariña, Zeus; Moreno Prieto, RafaelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Activities of daily living Mobility Rehabilitation Exercise
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Ortiz-Piña, M.; Molina-Garcia, P.; Femia, P.; Ashe, M.C.; Martín-Martín, L.; SalazarGraván, S.; Salas-Fariña, Z.; Prieto-Moreno, R.; Castellote -Caballero, Y.; Estevez-Lopez, F.; et al. Effects of Tele-Rehabilitation Compared with Home-Based in-Person Rehabilitation for Older Adult’s Function after Hip Fracture. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 5493. https://doi.org/10.3390/ ijerph18105493
Patrocinador
EIT-Health (20471); Foundation for Progress and Health, Ministry of Andalusia, Spain (PI-0372-2014); Andalusian Health Care Service has the patent “@ctivehip: plataforma de telerehabilitación que ayuda a recuperar la independencia funcional tras sufrir una fractura de cadera” - RPI201699902234065Résumé
This study aimed to examine the effect of a multidisciplinary tele-rehabilitation program
on functional recovery of older adults with hip fracture compared with home-based in-person
rehabilitation. In this single-blinded, non-randomized clinical trial, we included older with hip
fracture. The tele-rehabilitation group received a 12-week tele-rehabilitation program (supervised by
their family caregivers). The control group received the usual postoperative rehabilitation provided
by the Andalusian health system (Spain). The primary outcome was the patient-reported functional
status assessed with the Functional Independence Measure. We also measured performance-based
functional recovery using the Timed Up and Go Test and Short Physical Performance Battery. We
performed both a per-protocol (62 participants; 28 tele-rehabilitation and 34 control groups) and an
intention-to-treat analysis (71 participants; 35 tele-rehabilitation and 36 control groups). Participants
who used the tele-rehabilitation program had higher Functional Independence Measure scores (high
effect size: 0.98 Cohen’s d; p < 0.001) and better performance in the Timed Up and Go Test (medium
effect size: 0.63 Cohen’s d; p = 0.025) compared with the control group. Differences between groups
post-intervention were not statistically significant in the Short Physical Performance Battery. The
tele-rehabilitation intervention proposed in this study is a valuable treatment option in the recovery
process for older adults with hip fracture. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02968589.