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Impact of Volunteerism in the Acute Setting

T

Tan Tock Seng Hospital

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Knee Osteoarthritis

Treatments

Other: Exercise brochure
Other: Volunteers Service

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04063553
2018/00638

Details and patient eligibility

About

Rehabilitation, with a particular emphasis on physiotherapy and exercise, is widely promoted and strongly recommended after total knee replacement (TKR). The primary goals of rehabilitation are to improve knee range-of-motion, muscle strength, functional mobility and perceived quality of life. Exercises are usually prescribed and guided by a physiotherapist attending to the patient. The intensity of rehabilitation has an impact on clinical outcome. A study done by Lee et al in 2012 concluded that higher exercise dose translates to better function after TKR, especially in older population and for those with higher pain. Various literatures has also strongly recommended twice a day rehabilitation session for patients after TKR (Cook et al, 2008; Smith et al 2012).

Full description

Rehabilitation, with a particular emphasis on physiotherapy and exercise, is widely promoted and strongly recommended after total knee replacement (TKR). The primary goals of rehabilitation are to improve knee range-of-motion, muscle strength, functional mobility and perceived quality of life. Exercises are usually prescribed and guided by a physiotherapist attending to the patient. The intensity of rehabilitation has an impact on clinical outcome. A study done by Lee et al in 2012 concluded that higher exercise dose translates to better function after TKR, especially in older population and for those with higher pain. Various literatures has also strongly recommended twice a day rehabilitation session for patients after TKR (Cook et al, 2008; Smith et al 2012). The standard practice in the in-patient setting is that physiotherapist will attend to the TKR patients once a day and remind patients to perform exercises by themselves, following the exercise booklet given, during their free time in the ward to maximise their recovery. However, due to post-operative fatugue, pain and fearful of movement, most of the patients are not compliant to the exercises given.

Volunteers have been present in health care settings for centuries. Several studies have shown that volunteers can be an essential part of the healthcare system. They are commonly involved in non-clinical tasks such as providing emotional support to patients and families (Burbeck et al., 2014), assisting with meals (Robinson et al., 2014) and facilitating recreational activities in patients with dementia (Hall et al., 2017).

However, no study has investigated the involvement of volunteers in actual clinical work. Our study aim to explore the feasibility of volunteers involvement in teaching and guiding exercises which conventionally done by physiotherapists, and to investigate the effectiveness of such volunteer service. There is no existing evidence on volunteers dealing with elderly patients in acute stage right after surgery as well, and this clinical research will be the first to explore that.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

55 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Standard unilateral TKR without complications
  • 55 years or older
  • Pain less than or equal to 6/10 (i.e or between mild to moderate)
  • Cognitively intact (able to follow at least 1-step instruction consistently)
  • Vitals stable (Blood pressure, HR, oxygen saturation)
  • Able to verbalise understanding and give informed consent
  • Able to understand Mandarin or English

Exclusion criteria

  • Unable to follow instructions consistently due to
  • Cognitive impairment (Dementia, delirium)
  • Behavioural issues (Confused, aggressive)
  • Visually or hearing impaired
  • Language illiteracy (listening)
  • Medically unstable such as Hb drop (< 8) , acute desaturation
  • Reduced exercises tolerance- Unable to tolerate a 20 minutes exercise session
  • Post-operative complication such as delirium, DVT, cardiac issues.
  • Excessive bleeding from the wound dressing

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention arm
Other group
Description:
Subjects in the intervention group will receive standard physiotherapy care and an additional volunteers session once a day for at least 3 times during their stay in the hospital. The volunteer will set up the TKR exercise video for the subjects, then supervise or guide the subjects with the exercises.
Treatment:
Other: Volunteers Service
Control arm
Other group
Description:
The control group subjects will receive only standard physiotherapy care and they will be instructed to perform 1 set of exercises daily following a brochure given
Treatment:
Other: Exercise brochure

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Eng Chuan Neoh, Masters; Jaclyn Tan, Masters

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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