| Literature DB >> 31179912 |
Rosalie Barrett1, Louise Terry2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Worldwide, emergency department (ED) attendances and admissions to acute care have increased significantly. Many EDs are adding physiotherapists to their team thereby allowing doctors to see more cases that are 'urgent'. This is a move away from the 'traditional' physiotherapy service whereby the ED team refers patients to an outpatient physiotherapy service sometimes resulting in significant delays. Internationally, there is no agreed consensus on the role or value of ED-based physiotherapists. AIM: The objective of this review was to retrieve, critically appraise and synthesise the evidence from studies relating to patients' and healthcare professionals' experiences and/or perceptions of physiotherapy services in the ED.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency department; Experiences; Perceptions; Physiotherapy; Systematic review
Year: 2018 PMID: 31179912 PMCID: PMC6326147 DOI: 10.1186/s12245-018-0201-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Emerg Med ISSN: 1865-1372
PEO, search terms and key words, inclusion and exclusion criteria
| PEO component | Search terms/key words | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population 1 | Patient, service user, client | Primary research, qualitative research, peer-reviewed journal articles and grey literature, research related to the adult population, published between January 2006 and September 2016, English language only, UK and International studies | Systematic reviews, categorical data, standardised questionnaires with no text response |
| Population 2 | Physiotherapist, physiotherapy, physical therapist, healthcare profession, clinician, practitioner, extended scope practitioner, advanced practitioner | ||
| Exposure | Emergency department, accident and emergency, emergency care, prehospital care | ||
| Outcomes | Experiences, interviews, perceptions, qualitative, qualitative research |
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram
Studies included in this systematic review and summary characteristics
| Authors | Title | Participants, sample selection | Method | Setting | Findings | Strengths/weaknesses of Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anaf and Sheppard, (2010) [ | Lost in translation? How patients perceive the extended scope of physiotherapy in the emergency department | Patients attending ED, total | Qualitative questionnaire, open questions on opinions of ED physiotherapist, role of physio-therapist, suggestions for ED service improvements, demographics. Interpretative thematic analysis | Australia | Key themes: | Questionnaire piloted for dependability and trustworthiness. Ethical issues addressed fully |
| Harding et al. (2015) [ | Patient experience of expanded-scope-of-practice musculo-skeletal physio-therapy in the emergency department: a qualitative study | Patients attending ED, total | Descriptive observational study. One-to-one semi-structured interviews conducted some days after discharge from ED. In the case of the metropolitan hospital these were by phone but in person, at the rural hospital. Thematic analysis | Australia | Themes: | Calls it a descriptive observational study but it was simply descriptive qualitative. Refers to data triangulation but in fact it was just using more than one person to carry out thematic analysis. |
| Kilner and Sheppard, (2010) [ | The ‘lone ranger’: a descriptive study of physio-therapy practice in Australian emergency departments | Physiotherapists working in ED | Descriptive cross-sectional study. 28 | Australia | Descriptive demographic data relating to context of physiotherapists within ED. | Piloted the questionnaire |
| Lebec et al., (2010) [ | Emergency department physical therapist service: a pilot study examining physician perceptions | ED Physicians | Descriptive qualitative study. Interviews thematically analysed | USA | Themes: | Pilot study – no evidence of full study being undertaken. Not clear if the interviews were one-to-one or group. |
| Lefmann and Sheppard, (2014) [ | Perceptions of emergency department staff of the role of physiotherapists in the system: a qualitative investigation | ED doctors | Individual interviews, thematically analysed | Australia | Themes: | Very small number of participants so not really possible to draw conclusions regarding differences between professions. However, this study is part of a doctoral study (Anaf/Lefmann) with |
| Morris, Vine and Grimmer, (2015) [ | Evaluation of performance quality of an advanced scope physiotherapy role in a hospital emergency department | Quantitative evaluation of patients attending ED over 11 months | Prospective 53-week observational pilot study. Essentially, a service evaluation. Random selection of patients interviewed by telephone. Purposive sampling of staff. Weak form of content analysis used for interview data | Australia | Findings reported related to: | Questions for the interview are given. Many of them are closed questions and some could be interpreted as leading. |
| Sheppard, Anaf and Gordon, (2010) [ | Patient satisfaction with physiotherapy in the emergency department | Patients treated by a single Melbourne ED-based physio-therapist, purposeful sampling, convenient recruitment. ( | Qualitative interpretative design. Face to face interviews ( | Australia | Themes related to: | A fourth paper from the Sheppard team. |
Classification of included studies based on Sandelowski and Barroso’s typology [17]
| Classification | Number of studies | Author |
|---|---|---|
| No findings | 0 | |
| Topical survey | 0 | |
| Thematic survey | 2 | Kilner and Sheppard (2010) [ |
| Conceptual/thematic description | 3 | Lebec et al. (2010) [ |
| Interpretive explanation | 2 | Lefmann and Sheppard (2014) [ |