| Literature DB >> 27175210 |
Alice Freiberg1, Maria Girbig1, Ulrike Euler1, Julia Scharfe1, Albert Nienhaus2, Sonja Freitag3, Andreas Seidler1.
Abstract
ABSTRACT: The Kinaesthetics care conception is a nursing approach for patient handling which aims to prevent work-related complaints and diseases. The evidence about the influence of Kinaesthetics on musculoskeletal disorders among persons who handle patients is unclear to date. The purposes of the scoping review are to gain insight into the current state of research regarding the clinical effectiveness of Kinaesthetics (in terms of perceived exertion and musculoskeletal complaints) among persons who handle patients and to identify potential research gaps. A scoping review was conducted. The search strategy comprised a systematic search in electronic databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, AMED, CINAHL), a hand search, a fast forward search (Web of Science) and a Google scholar-search. The review process was carried out independently by two reviewers. Methodological quality was assessed for all studies using three methodological main categories (reporting quality, internal validity, external validity). Thirteen studies with different study designs were included. Seven studies investigated musculoskeletal complaints and nine studies the perceived exertion of nursing staff. Most studies were of very low methodology. Most studies reported a decrease of musculoskeletal complaints and perceived exertion due to Kinaesthetics. In conclusion, there is only little evidence of very low quality about the effectiveness of Kinaesthetics. Out of the studies it could be assumed that Kinaesthetics may decrease the patient handling related perceived exertion and musculoskeletal pain of persons who handle patients. But an overestimation of these results is likely, due to inadequate methodology of included studies. As a result, no clear recommendations about the effectiveness of the Kinaesthetics care conception can be made yet. Since a research gap was shown, further high quality intervention studies are necessary for clarifying the effectiveness of Kinaesthetics. PROSPERO REGISTRY NUMBER: CRD42015015811.Entities:
Keywords: Kinaesthetics; Musculoskeletal; Patient handling; Scoping review
Year: 2016 PMID: 27175210 PMCID: PMC4863326 DOI: 10.1186/s12995-016-0113-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Med Toxicol ISSN: 1745-6673 Impact factor: 2.646
Search string for MEDLINE
| 1 | Nurses [All Fields] OR nurses[mh] OR nurse [All Fields] OR Allied Health Personnel [mh] OR Health Personnel [mh] OR physiotherapy* OR physical therap* OR therapist* OR occupational therap* OR family [mh] OR family [All Fields] OR relative [All Fields] OR “caregiving volunteer” [All Fields] |
| 2 | Kinaesthetics OR kinesthetics OR kinaesthetic OR kinesthetic OR kinesthesia OR kinaesthesia |
| 3 | #1 AND #2 |
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the study selection
Summary of study characteristics
| Study | Study Design | Setting, Place | Time frame/Duration | Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome of interest | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Persons who handle patients | Patients | |||||||
| Betschon et al., 2014 | Evaluation Study | Nursing home, Meggen/Switzerland | Frame of the project: 2009–2012 Data collection: 2012 | Nursing staff, Questionnaires | NA | Basic course Kinaesthetics | NA | Physical Complaints, Perceived exertion immediately after mobilizationa |
| Buge & Mahler, 2004 | Evaluation study | Nursing service, University Hospital, Heidelberg/Germany | Frame of the project: 2000–2003 Data collection: 2003 | Nursing staff, | NA | Implementation of Kinaesthetics | NA | Feeling of physical relief (due to Kinaesthetics)a |
| Christen et al., 2002 | Uncontrolled before-after study | Hospital for nuclear medicine/radiotherapy, Zurich/Switzerland | Data collection: 1999 Follow-up: 6 month | Nursing staff, T0: | NA | Basic course Kinaesthetics | NA | Physical demands compared to subjective performance capacityb |
| Eisenschink et al., 2003 | Randomized controlled trial | Coronary care unit, University hospital, Ulm/Germany | Data collection: 1999–2000 | Nursing staff, no further information | Patients after aortocoronary bypass surgery with sternotomy, I: | Mobilisation of a patient with Kinaesthetics | Mobilisation of a patient with the standard mobilisation | Perceived exertion during first and second patient transferb |
| Friess-Ott & Müller, 2006 | Evaluation study | University hospital, Heidelberg/Germany | Frame of the project: 1998–2003 | Nursing staff, | NA | Basic course Kinaesthetics | NA | Pain, Physical relief, Effects on well-beinga |
| Hock-Rummelhardt, 2013 | Controlled before-after study | Hospital, Vienna/ Austria | Frame of the project: 2010–2012 Follow-up: 20 month | Nursing staff, I: | NA | Basic course Kinaesthetics, Practical guidance | No training in Kinaesthetics | Pain during/after nursing, Perceived exertion during worka |
| Huth et al., 2013 | Qualitative study (Interviews) | Homely environment, Witten/Germany | Data collection: 7 weeks | Caregiving family members, | NA | Course “Kinaes-thetics for caregiving family members” | NA | Musculo-skeletal complaints, Physical work loada |
| Lenker, 2008 | Randomized controlled trial | Intensive care unit, hospital, Ludwigsburg-Bietigheim/Germany | Data collection: 2002–2004 | NM | Patients after abdominal laparotomy, I: | Mobilisation of a patient to the edge of the bed based on Kinaesthetics principles | Mobilisation of a patient to the edge of the bed with conventional methods | Back pain during patient handling, Perceived exertion during patient handlingb |
| Maietta & Resch-Kröll, 2009 | Uncontrolled before-after study | State hospital, Hörgas/Austria | Frame of the project: nearly 24 month | Nursing staff, T0: | NA | Implementation of Kinaesthetics | NA | Perceived exertion during patient handlinga |
| Rettenberger & Schoenemeier, 2005 | Uncontrolled before-after study | Hospital, Heidenheim/Germany | Frame of the project: 1999–2000 Follow-up: 14 month | Nursing staff, | NA | Implementation of Kinaesthetics | NA | Back complaints during daily patient handling, Sick leave due to low back or sciatic complaintsa |
| Sedlak-Emperer, 2012 | Systematic review | Hospital, Nursing home, Austria | Search period: June 2009–March 2010 Applied publication period: 1990 – March 2010 | Nursing staff from 18 years of age | Patients from 18 years of age | Kinaesthetics | Conventional nursing | Spinal complaints, Spinal loadinga |
| Steinwidder & Lohrmann, 2008 | Narrative review | Setting: NM, Austria | Search period: July–September 2007 Applied publication period: NM | Nursing staff from 18 years of age | Patients from 18 years of age | Kinaesthetics | NM | Physical loadingb |
| Tamminen-Peter, 2006 | Non-randomized controlled trial | City hospital; I: Neurological rehabilitation C: Orthopaedic rehabilitation, Turku/Finland | Frame of the study: 2001–2002 Follow-up: 1 month | Nursing staff, | Elderly, compliant, partially weight-bearing patients with little muscle strength and low ability to move, | Mobilisation of a patient from a wheelchair to bed with Kinaesthetics | Mobilisation of a patient from a wheelchair to bed with the Durewall method | Decrease of perceived strain of the lower back; Decrease of perceived strain of the shoulder jointsa |
Abbreviations: C control group, I intervention group, n number of participants, NA not applicable, NM not mentioned, T0 start of the trial, T1 end of the trial
aThe outcome of interest was also a primary outcome in the study
bThe outcome of interest was a secondary outcome in the study and only mentioned casually
cThe paper contains different data about number of participants in the intervention and control group
Methodological assessment of included studies
| Study | Reporting quality | Internal validity | External validity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Betschon et al., 2014 [ | HR | HR | HR |
| Buge & Mahler, 2004 [ | LR | HR | LR |
| Christen et al., 2002 [ | UR | HR | HR |
| Eisenschink et al., 2003 [ | HR | UR | HR |
| Friess-Ott & Müller, 2006 [ | HR | HR | HR |
| Hock-Rummelhardt, 2013 [ | LR | HR | HR |
| Huth et al., 2013 [ | LR | LR | NA |
| Lenker, 2008 [ | HR | HR | HR |
| Maietta & Resch-Kröll, 2009 [ | HR | HR | HR |
| Rettenberger & Schoenemeier, 2005 [ | HR | HR | HR |
| Sedlak-Emperer, 2012 [ | UR | HR | LR |
| Steinwidder & Lohrmann, 2008 [ | HR | HR | UR |
| Tamminen-Peter, 2006 [ | UR | HR | HR |
General questions for each category
Reporting quality—Were important key points reported?
Internal validity—Are study results valid?
External validity—Are study results generalizable?
Abbreviations: HR high risk of bias, LR low risk of bias, NA not applicable, UR unclear risk of bias
Study results
| Study (design, intervention) | Musculoskeletal complaints | Perceived exertion/physical loads |
|---|---|---|
| Betschon et al., 2014 [ | Physical complaints: (% of surveyed nursing staff) | Perceived exertion immediately after mobilisation: (% of surveyed nursing staff) |
| (Evaluation study, Basic course Kinaesthetics) | - lower back/back: 39 | - exhausting: 53 |
| - neck: 37 | - very exhausting: 13 | |
| - legs: 27 | ||
| Buge & Mahler, 2004 [ | NA | Feeling of physical relief (due to Kinaesthetics) |
| (Evaluation study, Implementation of Kinaesthetics) | (Scale: 1–10, 1: Min; Measure: M, Mdn (SD)) | |
| - cervical spine: 4.84, 5.00 (2.65) | ||
| - arm/shoulder: 5.65, 6.00 (2.52) | ||
| - elbow/wrist: 4.72, 5.00 (2.49) | ||
| - thoracic spine: 6.00, 6.00 (2.42) | ||
| - hip: 5.64, 6.00 (2.56) | ||
| - knee: 5.26, 5.00 (2.73) | ||
| - lumbar spine: 6.83, 8.00 (2.46) | ||
| Christen et al., 2002 [ | NA | Physical demands compared to subjective capacity are…: ( |
| (Uncontrolled before-after study, Basic course Kinaesthetics) | …relatively tolerable: | |
| - never mentioned (T0, T1): | ||
| - only mentioned at T0: | ||
| - only mentioned at T1: | ||
| - mentioned at T0 and T1: | ||
| …(rather) too high: | ||
| - never mentioned (T0, T1): | ||
| - only mentioned at T0: | ||
| - only mentioned at T1: | ||
| - mentioned at T0 and T1: | ||
| Eisenschink et al., 2003 [ | NA | Perceived exertion…: (Scale: 0–100, 100: not exhausting; Measure: Mdn) |
| (Randomized controlled trial, Mobilisation of a patient with Kinaesthetics) | …during first patient transfer: | |
| - I: 82.5 | ||
| - C: 37.0a ( | ||
| …during second patient transfer: | ||
| - I: 84.5 | ||
| - C: 36.0b ( | ||
| Friess-Ott & Müller, 2006 [ | Pain relief due to Kinaesthetics: (% of surveyed nursing staff) | NA |
| (Evaluation study, Basic course Kinaesthetics) | Full agreement: | |
| - back: 38 | ||
| - neck: 25 | ||
| Partial agreement: | ||
| - neck, back, knee or legs: 23–36 | ||
| No agreement: | ||
| - back: 16 | ||
| - legs: 34 | ||
| Hock-Rummelhardt, 2013 [ | Pain during/after nursing…: (Scale: 1–6, 1: no pain; Measure: M (SD)) | Perceived exertion during work: (Scale: 1–6, 1: not exhausting; Measure: M (SD)) |
| (Controlled before-after study, Basic course Kinaesthetics, practical guidance) | …at T0: | …at T0: |
| - I: 2.36 (0.96) | - I: 4.07 (1.34) | |
| - C: 2.12 (1.04)a ( | - C: 4.37 (1.25)a,c | |
| …at T1: | …at T1: | |
| - I: 2.05 (1.12) | - I: 4.27 (1.49) | |
| - C: 2.04 (0.90)a ( | - C: 4.48 (1.48)a ( | |
| Lenker, 2008d [ | Back pain during patient handling (defined as pulling sensation): ( | Perceived exertion during patient handling: ( |
| (Randomized controlled trial, Mobilisation of a patient with Kinaesthetics) | - yes: I: | - little: I: |
| - no: I: | - much: I: | |
| Maietta & Resch-Kröll, 2009 [ | NA | Perceived exertion during patient handling of…: (Scale: 1–6, 1: great effort; Measure: M) |
| (Uncontrolled before-after study, Implemen-tation of Kinaesthetics) | …care-dependent patients: | |
| - T0: 3.10 | ||
| - T1: 3.70 (Change: –19.4 %)c | ||
| …obese patients: | ||
| - T0: 2.05 | ||
| - T1: 3.15 (Change: –53.7 %)c | ||
| …patients with high body tension: | ||
| - T0: 2.28 | ||
| - T1: 2.91 (Change: –27.6 %)c | ||
| Rettenberger & Schoenemeier, 2005 [ | Back complaints during daily patient handling: (% of surveyed nursing staff) | NA |
| (Uncontrolled before-after study, Implementation of Kinaesthetics) | - T0: 49 | |
| - T1: 30c | ||
| Tamminen-Peter, 2006d [ | NA | Decrease of perceived exertion at T1 for…: (% of surveyed nursing staff) |
| (Non-randomized controlled trial, Mobilisation of a patient from wheelchair to bed with Kinaesthetics) | …lower back: | |
| - I: 71 | ||
| - C: 28b ( | ||
| …shoulder joints: | ||
| - I: 53 | ||
| - C: 49a,c |
Abbreviation: C control group, I intervention group, M mean, Mdn median, Min minimum, N total sample size, n sub-sample size, NA not applicable, p p-value, SD standard deviation, T0 start of the trial, T1 end of the trial
aNo statistically significant difference between groups
bStatistically significant difference between groups
cNo p-value provided
dData were obtained from the author of the study