Dance-based versus conventional exercise in pulmonary rehabilitation: A retrospective service evaluation

Physiotherapy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 113 ◽  
pp. e54
Author(s):  
L. Gardiner ◽  
H. Shannon ◽  
L. Osman
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. e000880
Author(s):  
Adam Lewis ◽  
Ellena Knight ◽  
Matthew Bland ◽  
Jack Middleton ◽  
Esther Mitchell ◽  
...  

IntroductionSARS-CoV-2 has restricted access to face-to-face delivery of pulmonary rehabilitation (PR). Evidence suggests that telehealth-PR is non-inferior to outpatient PR. However, it is unknown whether patients who have been referred to face-to-face programmes can feasibly complete an online-PR programme.MethodsThis service evaluation used a mixed-methods approach to investigate a rapid PR service remodelling using the University of Gloucestershire eLearn Moodle platform. Quantitative baseline demographic and PR outcome data were collected from online-PR participants, and semistructured interviews were completed with PR staff and participants.ResultsTwenty-five individuals were eligible from a PR waiting list. Thirteen declined participation and 14 completed PR. Significant pre-post online PR improvements were achieved in 1 min sit-to-stand (CI 2.1 to 9 (p=0.004)), Generalised Anxiety Disorder (CI −0.3 to −2.6 (p=0.023)), Primary Health Questionnaire-9 (CI −0.3 to −5.1 (p=0.029)), Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire dyspnoea (CI 0.5 to 1.3 (p=0.001)), fatigue (CI 0.7 to 2 (p=0.0004)), emotion (CI 0.7 to 1.7 (p=0.0002)), mastery (CI 0.4 to 1.3 (p=0.001)). Interviews indicated that patient PR inclusion was made possible with digital support and a PR introduction session improved participant engagement and safety. Incremental progression of exercise was perceived as more successful online compared with face-to-face PR. However, perceptions were that education sessions were less successful. Online-PR required significant staff time resource.DiscussionOnline-PR improves patient outcomes and is feasible and acceptable for individuals referred for face-to-face PR in the context of a requirement for social distancing. Face-to-face programmes can be adapted in a rapid fashion with both staff and participants perceiving benefit. Future pragmatic trials are now warranted comparing online-PR including remote assessments to centre-based PR with suitably matched outcomes, and patient and staff perceptions sought regarding barriers and facilitators of online delivery.


1999 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 131-135
Author(s):  
Villiger

Die Pulmonale Rehabilitation (PR) ist ein wichtiger Bestandteil der Behandlung der chronisch obstruktiven Lungenkrankheiten (COPD und Emphysem). Es ist heute wissenschaftlich erwiesen und durch Metaanalysen bestätigt, daß diese Programme die Leistungsfähigkeit und die Lebensqualität verbessern sowie die Symptome reduzieren. Weiterhin bestehen Hinweise, daß durch die PR der Medikamentenverbrauch reduziert und das Überleben verbessert werden kann. Die PR ist multidisziplinär. Von zentraler Bedeutung sind neben der Medizinischen Trainingstherapie (Ausdauer/Kraft) Physiotherapie, Patientenschulung, psychosoziale Betreuung und Ernährungsberatung. Die PR scheint besonders geeignet für Patienten mit geringer Leistungsfähigkeit, Muskelschwäche, ausgeprägten subjektiven Symptomen und schlechter Lebensqualität. Der Ort der Rehabilitation richtet sich nach dem Schweregrad der Symptome, den Anforderungen an das Reha-Team und den lokalen Möglichkeiten.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 6-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Blair ◽  
Simon Peter Kendal ◽  
Gary Richard Shaw ◽  
Sonia Byers ◽  
Rosie Dew ◽  
...  

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