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Improving Home-Based Scoliosis Therapy: Findings From a Web-Based Survey

BACKGROUND: Conservative scoliosis therapy in the form of assisted physiotherapeutic scoliosis exercises is supplemented by self-contained training at home, depending on the approach (eg, Schroth, the Scientific Exercises Approach to Scoliosis). Complex exercises, lack of awareness of the importance...

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Autores principales: Günther, Florian, Schober, Fabian, Hunger, Sandra, Schellnock, Julia, Derlien, Steffen, Schleifenbaum, Stefan, Drossel, Welf-Guntram, Heyde, Christoph-Eckhard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10439467/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3754
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/46217
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author Günther, Florian
Schober, Fabian
Hunger, Sandra
Schellnock, Julia
Derlien, Steffen
Schleifenbaum, Stefan
Drossel, Welf-Guntram
Heyde, Christoph-Eckhard
author_facet Günther, Florian
Schober, Fabian
Hunger, Sandra
Schellnock, Julia
Derlien, Steffen
Schleifenbaum, Stefan
Drossel, Welf-Guntram
Heyde, Christoph-Eckhard
author_sort Günther, Florian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Conservative scoliosis therapy in the form of assisted physiotherapeutic scoliosis exercises is supplemented by self-contained training at home, depending on the approach (eg, Schroth, the Scientific Exercises Approach to Scoliosis). Complex exercises, lack of awareness of the importance of training, and missing supervision by therapists often lead to uncertainty and reduced motivation, which in turn reduces the success of home-based therapy. Increasing digitalization in the health care sector offers opportunities to close this gap. However, research is needed to analyze the requirements and translate the potential of digital tools into concrete solution concepts. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the potential for optimizing home-based scoliosis therapy in terms of motivation, assistive devices, and digital tools. METHODS: In collaboration with the Institute of Physiotherapy at the Jena University Hospital, a survey was initiated to address patients with scoliosis and physical therapists. A digital questionnaire was created for each target group and distributed via physiotherapies, scoliosis forums, the Bundesverband für Skoliose Selbsthilfe e. V. newsletter via a link, and a quick response code. The survey collected data on demographics, therapy, exercise habits, motivation, assistive devices, and digital tools. Descriptive statistics were used for evaluation. RESULTS: Of 141 survey participants, 72 (51.1%; n=62, 86.1%, female; n=10, 13.9%, male) patients with scoliosis with an average age of 40 (SD 17.08) years and 30 scoliosis therapists completed the respective questionnaires. The analysis of home-based therapy showed that patients with scoliosis exercise less per week (2 times or less; 45/72, 62.5%) than they are recommended to do by therapists (at least 3 times; 53/72, 73.6%). Patients indicated that their motivation could be increased by practicing together with friends and acquaintances (54/72, 75%), a supporting therapy device (48/72, 66.7%), or a digital profile (46/72, 63.9%). The most important assistive devices, which are comparatively rarely used in home-based therapy, included balance boards (20/72, 27.8%), wall bars (23/72, 31.9%), mirrors (36/72, 50%), and long bars (40/72, 55.6%). Therapists saw the greatest benefit of digital tools for scoliosis therapy in increasing motivation (26/30, 87%), improving home therapy (25/30, 83%), monitoring therapy progress (25/30, 83%), and demonstrating exercise instructions (24/30, 80%). CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we investigated whether there is any potential for improvement in home-based scoliosis therapy. For this purpose, using online questionnaires, we asked patients with scoliosis and therapists questions about the following topics: exercise habits, outpatient and home-based therapy, motivation, supportive devices, and digital tools. The results showed that a lack of motivation, suitable training equipment, and tools for self-control leads to a low training workload. From the perspective of the patients surveyed, this problem can be addressed through community training with friends or acquaintances, a supportive therapy device, and digital elements, such as apps, with training instructions and user profiles.
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spelling pubmed-104394672023-08-20 Improving Home-Based Scoliosis Therapy: Findings From a Web-Based Survey Günther, Florian Schober, Fabian Hunger, Sandra Schellnock, Julia Derlien, Steffen Schleifenbaum, Stefan Drossel, Welf-Guntram Heyde, Christoph-Eckhard JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol Original Paper BACKGROUND: Conservative scoliosis therapy in the form of assisted physiotherapeutic scoliosis exercises is supplemented by self-contained training at home, depending on the approach (eg, Schroth, the Scientific Exercises Approach to Scoliosis). Complex exercises, lack of awareness of the importance of training, and missing supervision by therapists often lead to uncertainty and reduced motivation, which in turn reduces the success of home-based therapy. Increasing digitalization in the health care sector offers opportunities to close this gap. However, research is needed to analyze the requirements and translate the potential of digital tools into concrete solution concepts. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the potential for optimizing home-based scoliosis therapy in terms of motivation, assistive devices, and digital tools. METHODS: In collaboration with the Institute of Physiotherapy at the Jena University Hospital, a survey was initiated to address patients with scoliosis and physical therapists. A digital questionnaire was created for each target group and distributed via physiotherapies, scoliosis forums, the Bundesverband für Skoliose Selbsthilfe e. V. newsletter via a link, and a quick response code. The survey collected data on demographics, therapy, exercise habits, motivation, assistive devices, and digital tools. Descriptive statistics were used for evaluation. RESULTS: Of 141 survey participants, 72 (51.1%; n=62, 86.1%, female; n=10, 13.9%, male) patients with scoliosis with an average age of 40 (SD 17.08) years and 30 scoliosis therapists completed the respective questionnaires. The analysis of home-based therapy showed that patients with scoliosis exercise less per week (2 times or less; 45/72, 62.5%) than they are recommended to do by therapists (at least 3 times; 53/72, 73.6%). Patients indicated that their motivation could be increased by practicing together with friends and acquaintances (54/72, 75%), a supporting therapy device (48/72, 66.7%), or a digital profile (46/72, 63.9%). The most important assistive devices, which are comparatively rarely used in home-based therapy, included balance boards (20/72, 27.8%), wall bars (23/72, 31.9%), mirrors (36/72, 50%), and long bars (40/72, 55.6%). Therapists saw the greatest benefit of digital tools for scoliosis therapy in increasing motivation (26/30, 87%), improving home therapy (25/30, 83%), monitoring therapy progress (25/30, 83%), and demonstrating exercise instructions (24/30, 80%). CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we investigated whether there is any potential for improvement in home-based scoliosis therapy. For this purpose, using online questionnaires, we asked patients with scoliosis and therapists questions about the following topics: exercise habits, outpatient and home-based therapy, motivation, supportive devices, and digital tools. The results showed that a lack of motivation, suitable training equipment, and tools for self-control leads to a low training workload. From the perspective of the patients surveyed, this problem can be addressed through community training with friends or acquaintances, a supportive therapy device, and digital elements, such as apps, with training instructions and user profiles. JMIR Publications 2023-08-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10439467/ /pubmed/3754 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/46217 Text en ©Florian Günther, Fabian Schober, Sandra Hunger, Julia Schellnock, Steffen Derlien, Stefan Schleifenbaum, Welf-Guntram Drossel, Christoph-Eckhard Heyde. Originally published in JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technology (https://rehab.jmir.org), 04.08.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technology, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://rehab.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Günther, Florian
Schober, Fabian
Hunger, Sandra
Schellnock, Julia
Derlien, Steffen
Schleifenbaum, Stefan
Drossel, Welf-Guntram
Heyde, Christoph-Eckhard
Improving Home-Based Scoliosis Therapy: Findings From a Web-Based Survey
title Improving Home-Based Scoliosis Therapy: Findings From a Web-Based Survey
title_full Improving Home-Based Scoliosis Therapy: Findings From a Web-Based Survey
title_fullStr Improving Home-Based Scoliosis Therapy: Findings From a Web-Based Survey
title_full_unstemmed Improving Home-Based Scoliosis Therapy: Findings From a Web-Based Survey
title_short Improving Home-Based Scoliosis Therapy: Findings From a Web-Based Survey
title_sort improving home-based scoliosis therapy: findings from a web-based survey
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10439467/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3754
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/46217
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