[Purpose] Walking speed is related to important outcomes such as mortality and is fundamental to independent and safe ambulation in the community. The objectives of this study were to determine if the discharge gait speed of patients completing subacute rehabilitation was slow relative to normative and street crossing reference values, and whether such speed was associated with age, gender, or diagnosis. [Subjects and Methods] Consecutive patients admitted to a subacute rehabilitation facility were screened based on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Participants were 109 patients (56 women) 60 to 98 (mean=78.2) years old who were divided into 10 diagnostic categories. Gait speed was measured over a distance of 5.2 meters as patients walked at their most comfortable speed beyond a designated finish line. Timing with a digital stopwatch began after an acceleration distance of 1 meter and ceased as patients crossed the finish line. [Results] The patients' comfortable gait speed (mean=0.58; SD=0.19; range=0.09-1.10 m/s) was significantly less than 1.0m/s (normal reference value) (1.11±0.15 m/s) but significantly greater than that required for crossing the street (0.49 m/s). Nevertheless, 27.5% of patients did not achieve a walking speed of 0.49 m/s. Speed was inversely related to age and was lower among women, but it was not affected by diagnostic category. [Conclusion] Gait speed remains limited when patients are discharged home from subacute rehabilitation and was slowest among older women patients. Further therapy may be warranted for such patients after discharge.
[Purpose] Walking speed is related to important outcomes such as mortality and is fundamental to independent and safe ambulation in the community. The objectives of this study were to determine if the discharge gait speed of patients completing subacute rehabilitation was slow relative to normative and street crossing reference values, and whether such speed was associated with age, gender, or diagnosis. [Subjects and Methods] Consecutive patients admitted to a subacute rehabilitation facility were screened based on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Participants were 109 patients (56 women) 60 to 98 (mean=78.2) years old who were divided into 10 diagnostic categories. Gait speed was measured over a distance of 5.2 meters as patients walked at their most comfortable speed beyond a designated finish line. Timing with a digital stopwatch began after an acceleration distance of 1 meter and ceased as patients crossed the finish line. [Results] The patients' comfortable gait speed (mean=0.58; SD=0.19; range=0.09-1.10 m/s) was significantly less than 1.0m/s (normal reference value) (1.11±0.15 m/s) but significantly greater than that required for crossing the street (0.49 m/s). Nevertheless, 27.5% of patients did not achieve a walking speed of 0.49 m/s. Speed was inversely related to age and was lower among women, but it was not affected by diagnostic category. [Conclusion] Gait speed remains limited when patients are discharged home from subacute rehabilitation and was slowest among older womenpatients. Further therapy may be warranted for such patients after discharge.
The ability to walk is valued highly by human beings1). Although speed is only one aspect of gait about which individuals
might be concerned2), it is an important
one. Gait speed has been shown to be a predictor of outcomes such as mortality and incident
health events3, 4). Gait speed is also fundamental to independent and safe ambulation
in the community. Specifically with regard to safety, Andrews et al. recently reported that
the mean speed necessary for crossing streets in the time allotted by crossing signals was
0.49 m/s5).Considerable time is spent on gait-training patients admitted to rehabilitation
facilities6). Nevertheless, older age and
female gender7), as well as various
underlying pathologies or conditions, may limit the speed at which patients walk at
discharge8). If patients' walking speed
is diminished when they are discharged home, additional therapy may be warranted if their
risk of untoward outcomes is to be reduced and they are to manage life in the community. The
primary purpose of this study, therefore, was to determine if the gait speed of older
patients discharged to home from a subacute rehabilitation facility was limited relative to
a gender and age relevant normative reference value and a criterion reference value,
street-crossing. The second purpose was to determine if gait speed at discharge was
associated with age and whether it differed between men and women and across diagnostic
groups.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS
Prior to initiating this study the Institutional Review Board of the University of
Connecticut granted approval. Participants provided their written informed consent.
Subjects
Consecutive patients admitted to a subacute rehabilitation facility were screened based
on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Inclusion in this study required that subjects were
at least 60 years of age, were independently ambulatory in the community prior to the
hospital admission preceding their transfer to the subacute facility, and were scheduled
for a discharge to the community . Exclusion criteria were an Abbreviated Mental Test
score of less than 6/109) and a
requirement of more than minimum assistance with walking at discharge from the facility.
The first exclusion criterion was founded on the need for participants to understand
instructions and provide informed consent; the second exclusion criterion was based on the
requirement that participants themselves be the primary determinant of their own gait
speed8).Following these criteria 109 patients were included in this study. They ranged in age
from 60 to 98 years (78.2±9.4). Fifty-six were women and 53 were men. There were 9
diagnostic categories to which 4 or more patients belonged: total knee arthroplasty (n=
24), fall with or without fracture (n= 13), infection (n= 13), cardiac (n= 13), pulmonary
(n= 8), total hip arthroplasty (n= 8), stroke (n= 7), cancer (n= 5), and spinal (n= 4) .
Fourteen patients did not belong to any of these categories and were categorized as
“other.” Most patients walked without personal assistance. Single-point canes were the
most frequently used assistive device (Table
1).
Table 1.
Description of personal assistance and assistive device used for walking at
discharge
Category
N (%)
Personal Assistance
Minimum
2 (1.8)
Contact guarding
6 (5.5)
Supervision
11 (10.1)
None
90 (82.6)
Assistive Device
Rolling walker/rollator
38 (34.8)
Walker
1 (0.9)
Crutches
1 (0.9)
Quad cane
4 (3.7)
Single point cane
47 (43.1)
Hand-held
1 (0.9)
None
17 (15.6)
Methods
Gait speed was measured over a distance of 5.2 meters as patients walked at their most
comfortable speed beyond a designated finish line. One of 2 testers timed a single trial
as they walked behind and to the side of patients. Timing with a digital stopwatch began
after patients had traversed an acceleration distance of 1 meter and ceased when they
crossed the finish line7). Measurements
of gait speed measured on consecutive days earlier during the rehabilitation stay
demonstrated good test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient =
0.899).All data analysis was conducted using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS
14.0). Standard descriptive statistics were calculated. Thereafter patients' discharge
walking speed was compared with age- and gender- matched normative reference values7) and the speed required for crossing the
street (0.49 meters/second)5). Sign tests
were used for this purpose. The relationship between age and gait speed was determined
using the Spearman correlation coefficient. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare
the gait speed of men and women. The Kruskal-Wallis test was conducted to determine if
gait speed differed among the diagnostic categories.
RESULTS
The patients' mean speed was 0.58±0.19 (range 0.09–1.10) m/s. The speed of apparently
healthy individuals matched categorically for age and gender was 1.11±0.15 (range 0.94–1.34)
m/s4). The sign test showed the patients
comfortable gait speeds were significantly less than the relevant norms (z= −9.961,
p<0.001). Only 2 patients had comfortable speeds equal to or greater than their age and
gender normative values. The sign test showed that the patients' comfortable gait speed was
significantly faster than the 0.49 m/s street crossing criterion (z= −4.598, p<0.001).
Yet the comfortable walking speed of 27.5% of the patients was slower than this value. The
Spearman correlation between age and gait speed was −0.249 (p= 0.009). The Mann-Whitney U
test showed that the women walked significantly slower (z= −2.231, p= 0.026) than the men
(0.54±0.18 m/s vs 0.62±0.20 m/s, respectively). Table
2 summarizes the speeds of the different diagnostic groups. The Kruskal-Wallis test
did not demonstrate a significant difference in the speeds (c2= 15.86, p=
0.070).
Table 2.
Description of gait speed (meters/second) at discharge for different diagnostic
categories
Diagnostic Category
Mean ± SD
Minimum– Maximum
Cardiac
0.47±0.11
0.27–0.59
Cancer
0.50±0.28
0.09–0.87
Pulmonary
0.51±0.17
0.31–0.84
Spinal
0.51±0.17
0.29–0.69
Fall/fracture
0.54±0.13
0.38–0.86
Infection
0.58±0.24
0.28–1.04
Knee arthroplasty
0.61±0.15
0.32–0.87
Other
0.65±0.24
0.27–1.10
Hip arthroplasty
0.68±0.19
0.41–0.94
Stroke
0.68±0.22
0.36–0.98
DISCUSSION
Gait limitations are a common target of intervention for patients admitted to
rehabilitation facilities6). Although the
109 patients in our study belonged to diverse diagnostic categories, all but 7 had an ICD 9
treatment diagnosis of “Difficulty in Walking.” The ICD 9 treatment diagnosis for 3 of the
remaining patients was “Abnormality of Gait.” Consequently, considerable time was spent
gait-training these patients over a rehabilitation stay of 2 to 94 (mean= 17.0) days. This
training notwithstanding, the walking speed at discharge was less than age- and gender based
norms for all but 2 patients. Moreover, at discharge 27.5% demonstrated a speed less than
required (0.49 m/s) to cross the street in the allotted time. These patients, it should be
acknowledged, may have been able to walk faster than 0.49 m/s if asked to do so. Regardless,
timing comfortable gait speed identified limitations in gait that might not be identified by
other measures. For the 109 patients tested, 82.6% would not have been categorized as
limited based on need of supervision or personal assistance and 15.6% would not have been
identified as limited based on use of an assistive device.Our findings corroborate those of others reporting limitations in the gait speed of older
adults discharged from hospital10) and
rehabilitation programs8, 11). These findings, along with a recognition of the
implications of gait speed for outcomes among older adults3, 4), highlight the importance
of addressing gait speed in this population. Our study identified older women as more likely
to demonstrate slow walking speeds. This finding, which is consistent with what is known
about healthy individuals7), suggests that
the walking speed of older women merits particular scrutiny. Our study did not identify
diagnostic group as a determinant of walking speed. Although the study may have been
underpowered to detect such differences, this finding suggests that slow walking speed is a
likely problem regardless of diagnostic group.Our study does not address whether a specific rehabilitation intervention or an extended
rehabilitation stay would be beneficial for in increasing gait speed. It does not report on
walking speed before admission to the hospital or after discharge from subacute
rehabilitation. Nevertheless, broader use of gait speed as a vital sign12) would appear warranted as would be interventions for
patients who continue to demonstrate limitations in gait speed.
CONCLUSION
Despite undergoing short-term rehabilitation with a focus on gait-training, patients
continued to walk slowly at discharge. This was particularly true of older women. Given the
importance of gait speed to consequential outcomes and community ambulation, follow-up would
appear warranted.
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