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Therapist perceptions of the Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for assessing patients with chronic disease

BACKGROUND: The Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for chronic patients receiving Free of Charge Physiotherapy (PhysDB-FCP) was piloted over a 1-year period. The purpose of the PhysDB-FCP is to provide a user friendly digital online structured tool that standardizes initial and follow up clinica...

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Autores principales: Stubbs, Peter W., Stabel, Henriette H., Andersen, Nils-Bo de Vos, Smith, Helle Rønn, Næss-Schmidt, Erhard T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8568098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34735522
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0259355
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author Stubbs, Peter W.
Stabel, Henriette H.
Andersen, Nils-Bo de Vos
Smith, Helle Rønn
Næss-Schmidt, Erhard T.
author_facet Stubbs, Peter W.
Stabel, Henriette H.
Andersen, Nils-Bo de Vos
Smith, Helle Rønn
Næss-Schmidt, Erhard T.
author_sort Stubbs, Peter W.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for chronic patients receiving Free of Charge Physiotherapy (PhysDB-FCP) was piloted over a 1-year period. The purpose of the PhysDB-FCP is to provide a user friendly digital online structured tool that standardizes initial and follow up clinical assessments generating data that can be used for clinical decision making and support future research in physiotherapy for patients with chronic disease. Although initial assessments were completed, the attrition rate was 73% and 90% at 3- and 6- months, respectively, which suggests problems with the current tool. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the perspectives of the physiotherapists that used the PhysDB-FCP and propose changes to the tool based on this feedback. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty of the 103 physiotherapists introduced to the PhysDB-FCP completed an anonymous online survey. Physiotherapists were asked Likert/categorical and yes/no questions on experiences with the PhysDB-FCP within their practice, perceptions of patient experiences, suitability of the resources and support provided by the PhysDB-FCP working group and the ideal administration frequency of the assessments within the PhysDB-FCP. Open ended feedback on possible improvements to the PhysDB-FCP was also collected. RESULTS: Physiotherapists agreed that the PhysDB-FCP was useful for taking a physiotherapy assessment (74%) and the patient survey was useful for goal setting (72%). Although physiotherapists felt the PhysDB-FCP was well-defined (82%), only 36% would like to use a similar tool again. Generally, the PhysDB-FCP was too time-consuming, administered too frequently and included irrelevant items. For example, 72% of physiotherapists took >45 min to administer the assessment in the first consultation which was performed over multiple sessions. CONCLUSIONS: The perspectives of physiotherapists using The PhysDB-FCP suggest specific changes that will ensure better use of the tool in future practice. Changes will likely involve administering the assessment less frequently (every 6-months to 1-year), shortening the assessment, and using diagnosis-specific assessment items.
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spelling pubmed-85680982021-11-05 Therapist perceptions of the Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for assessing patients with chronic disease Stubbs, Peter W. Stabel, Henriette H. Andersen, Nils-Bo de Vos Smith, Helle Rønn Næss-Schmidt, Erhard T. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for chronic patients receiving Free of Charge Physiotherapy (PhysDB-FCP) was piloted over a 1-year period. The purpose of the PhysDB-FCP is to provide a user friendly digital online structured tool that standardizes initial and follow up clinical assessments generating data that can be used for clinical decision making and support future research in physiotherapy for patients with chronic disease. Although initial assessments were completed, the attrition rate was 73% and 90% at 3- and 6- months, respectively, which suggests problems with the current tool. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the perspectives of the physiotherapists that used the PhysDB-FCP and propose changes to the tool based on this feedback. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty of the 103 physiotherapists introduced to the PhysDB-FCP completed an anonymous online survey. Physiotherapists were asked Likert/categorical and yes/no questions on experiences with the PhysDB-FCP within their practice, perceptions of patient experiences, suitability of the resources and support provided by the PhysDB-FCP working group and the ideal administration frequency of the assessments within the PhysDB-FCP. Open ended feedback on possible improvements to the PhysDB-FCP was also collected. RESULTS: Physiotherapists agreed that the PhysDB-FCP was useful for taking a physiotherapy assessment (74%) and the patient survey was useful for goal setting (72%). Although physiotherapists felt the PhysDB-FCP was well-defined (82%), only 36% would like to use a similar tool again. Generally, the PhysDB-FCP was too time-consuming, administered too frequently and included irrelevant items. For example, 72% of physiotherapists took >45 min to administer the assessment in the first consultation which was performed over multiple sessions. CONCLUSIONS: The perspectives of physiotherapists using The PhysDB-FCP suggest specific changes that will ensure better use of the tool in future practice. Changes will likely involve administering the assessment less frequently (every 6-months to 1-year), shortening the assessment, and using diagnosis-specific assessment items. Public Library of Science 2021-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8568098/ /pubmed/34735522 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0259355 Text en © 2021 Stubbs et al 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 author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Stubbs, Peter W.
Stabel, Henriette H.
Andersen, Nils-Bo de Vos
Smith, Helle Rønn
Næss-Schmidt, Erhard T.
Therapist perceptions of the Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for assessing patients with chronic disease
title Therapist perceptions of the Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for assessing patients with chronic disease
title_full Therapist perceptions of the Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for assessing patients with chronic disease
title_fullStr Therapist perceptions of the Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for assessing patients with chronic disease
title_full_unstemmed Therapist perceptions of the Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for assessing patients with chronic disease
title_short Therapist perceptions of the Danish Physiotherapy Research Database for assessing patients with chronic disease
title_sort therapist perceptions of the danish physiotherapy research database for assessing patients with chronic disease
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8568098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34735522
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0259355
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