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Implementing Group Physical Therapy (PT) for Veterans with Knee Osteoarthritis (OA): Function QUERI 2.0 (Group PT) aims to implement, evaluate and sustain Group PT in 16 VA sites using a type III effectiveness-implementation hybrid design framework, which will compare implementation strategies while also gathering information about the clinical intervention and related outcomes.
Full description
Knee OA is a common and often disabling health condition that affects 14 million people in the US, and rates are about twice as high among Veterans than the general population. Forty-three percent of VA healthcare users report a diagnosis of arthritis (primarily OA), and of these, 63% report activity limitations due to joint symptoms. The prevalence of OA is expected to rise dramatically over the next several decades, and this will place increasing demand on the VA to provide core, evidence-based components of knee OA care, including PT. Many of the negative effects of knee OA can be successfully mitigated through PT, a recommended core component of treatment; however, many VA healthcare users with knee OA do not receive PT, and a key barrier is the high demand for PT services in the VA. Therefore, it is important to implement efficient, effective models of physical therapy care delivery for Veterans with knee OA.
Group PT for knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a 6-session group outpatient program developed by an interdisciplinary team of investigators, clinicians and administrators at the Durham VA and funded by the VA Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUE 20-023). In a previously conducted (at the Durham VA) randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing group-based PT vs. traditional individual PT for knee OA, group PT resulted in equivalent or greater improvements in pain and functional outcomes compared with individual PT. This is important because the group-based model provides care to more Veterans with fewer staffing resources, thereby increasing access and efficiency.
In this trial, the investigators plan to implement the group PT clinical program at a minimum of 16 VA medical centers using a type III effectiveness-implementation hybrid design framework ,with sites enrolled and randomized to receive standard implementation support (foundational Replicating Effective Programs or foundational REP) or a higher-intensity implementation support (enhanced REP), including additional facilitation, self-organization, and team building support for sites that do not meet adoption goals at 6 months or sustainment goals at 9 months.
Objectives. The investigators plan to develop scalable approaches to implement and sustain Group PT as well as evaluate implementation with foundational REP versus the enhanced-implementation strategy (enhanced REP).
Methodology. To evaluate implementation, the investigators will randomize sites 1:1 to either foundational REP or enhanced REP (enREP). The investigators will use generalized linear models to examine the effect of foundational vs. enhanced REP on implementation outcomes at 12 months.
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Inclusion criteria
Participating sites must meet the following criteria: 1) Clinical personnel on staff to conduct initial evaluations and lead group classes (e,g, physical therapist, PT assistant, kinesiotherapist): this should include at least 1 primary person and 1 back-up person to cover all aspects of program delivery, 2) Offer outpatient PT service, 3) Space to conduct group sessions (if implementing in-person Group PT classes), and (4) Submission of a signed participation agreement.
The clinical outcomes assessment will include all patients enrolled in Group PT that meet inclusion criteria (clinical diagnosis of knee OA).
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19 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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