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The purpose of this quality improvement project was first to monitor usual physical therapy care (types & cardiovascular intensity of interventions and amount of stepping practice provided) and outcomes. Following which educational training and support was provided to treating physical therapists to encourage implementation of evidence-based practices. Specifically, therapists were encouraged to prioritize the practice of walking, particularly at higher cardiovascular intensities during scheduled therapy sessions. Fidelity metrics in the form of chart audits and pedometer-based step counts were utilized to determine compliance with the evidence-based intervention and ultimately investigated for potential effects on patient outcome measures.
Full description
Converging data over the past 20 years suggest that the provision of large amounts of walking practice can improve walking function for individuals poststroke with greater improvements observed when the walking training is performed at moderate to high aerobic intensities. Despite this, current physical therapy practice during inpatient rehabilitation suggests limited walking practice is provided and low cardiovascular intensities achieved.
The purpose of this current quality improvement project is to evaluate the feasibility of implementing Focused, Intensive, Repeated Stepping Training (FIRST) during routine inpatient physical therapy and potential effects on patient outcome measures.
Prior to the usual care phase of the project, the outcome measures team worked to standardize routine collection of specific outcome measures (10 meter walk test, 6 minute walk test, Berg Balance Scale) at regular intervals (admission, weekly, discharge) in addition to 3rd party payer mandated measures (e.g., Functional Independence Measure; FIM). After which, existing physical therapy practice and outcomes will be monitored for a period of approximately 9-12 months. After which, educational training will be provided to physical therapists associated with the management of these patients as well as ongoing support (e.g., didactic, psychomotor, technical) and audit/feedback (e.g., chart audits, step count feedback) with fidelity metrics monitored from chart audits (walking practiced, walking prioritized, cardiovascular intensity documented, target intensity achieved) and pedometer step counts.
Potential changes in locomotor (e.g., 10 meter walk test, 6 minute walk test), non-locomotor outcomes (Berg Balance Scale, FIM-bed to chair transfers, FIM - toilet transfers), and incidence of adverse events will be evaluated if fidelity metrics indicate meaningful changes in clinical practice patterns. It is currently unknown what values of the fidelity metrics indicate successful implementation of the FIRST intervention, what knowledge translation strategies may be most effective to yield changes in therapists practice patterns, or the duration of time necessary to sufficiently achieve these changes in practice.
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2,000 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Thomas G Hornby, PhD; Chris Henderson, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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