| Literature DB >> 33154647 |
Hanne Leirbekk Mjøsund1, Cathrine Fredriksen Moe1,2, Elissa Burton3, Lisbeth Uhrenfeldt1,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reablement is a rehabilitative intervention provided to homecare receivers with the aim of improving function and independence. There is limited evidence of the effectiveness of reablement, and the content of these interventions is variable. Physical activity (PA) is known to be important for improving and maintaining function among older adults, but it is unclear how PA is integrated in reablement.Entities:
Keywords: 80 and over; aged; exercise therapy; health personnel; health services for the aged; physical fitness; rehabilitation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33154647 PMCID: PMC7606358 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S270247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Figure 1Prisma Flow diagram. (Adapted with permission from the PRISMA Group) Moher D, Liberati A, Tetzlaff J, Altman DG, The PRISMA Group (2009). Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses: The PRISMA Statement. PLoS Med 6(7): e1000097. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed1000097.The PRISMA Statement and the PRISMA Explanation and Elaboration document are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. ().76
Intervention Studies with PA Characteristics and Assessment Methods for Physical Fitness and PA Levels
| Author, Year, Country | Design | Intervention | Control Intervention | Duration of Intervention | HCPs | Sample Size (Each Group) | Characteristics of General PA Facilitation | Exercise Characteristics | Assessment of Physical Fitness | Assessment of PA Levels |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention studies – RCTs (n=8) | ||||||||||
| Burton et al, | Parallel pragmatic RCT | Restorative care + LIFE (lifestyle functional exercise program) | Restorative care + standard exercise program | 8 weeks | OTs | 80 (40, 40) | Include promotion of active engagement in activities of daily living. | Yes. Detailed descriptions provided (elaborated in text) | Functional reach Sit-to stand | Exercise diary |
| Burton et al, | Pragmatic RCT long-term follow-up | Restorative care + LIFE (lifestyle exercise program) | Restorative care + standard exercise program | 8 weeks | OTs | 80 (40, 40) | Refers to Burton 2013 | Same as Burton 2013 | Same as Burton 2013 | Exercise diary |
| Tuntland et al, | Parallel-group superiority RCT | Reablement | Usual care | Max 3 months (average: 10 weeks) | OT | 61 (31,30) | Training in daily activities such as dressing, food preparation, vacuuming, bus transport, visiting friends at a club, or being able to knit | Exercise programs were recommended as individual features, such as indoor or outdoor walking with or without walking aids, climbing stairs, transferring and performing exercises to improve strength, balance, or fine motor skills | TUG Grip strength | No |
| Lewin et al, | RCT | HIP (the home independence program). A restorative home-care program | Usual home care | Max 12 weeks | RNs | 750 (375, 375) | Promotion of active engagement in daily activities | Strength, balance, and endurance programs for improving or maintaining mobility | TUG (results for TUG not reported) | No |
| Whitehead et al, | Feasibility parallel group RCT | Reablement + OT intervention | Reablement | 6 weeks ± | Social care workers Reablement team leader OT | 30 (15/15) | Practicing ADL-activities was part of the intervention | Not reported | No | No |
| Parsons et al, | RCT | Supported discharge team | Usual care | Max 6 weeks | Healthcare assistants | 183 (97,86) | Utilize functional rehabilitation principles to maximize recovery through incorporating exercises within ADL tasks | Exercises progressively incorporated within ADL tasks | No | No |
| Hattori et al, | Parallel, two-arm superiority RCT | Reablement + Usual care | Usual care | 5 months | PTs | 375 (190/185) | Encouraged to regain physical activities and participation in ADL/IADL, based on motivational interviewing. Aimed to improve body function, activities and participation (ICF) | (See characteristics of general PA facilitation) | No | No |
| Jeon et al, | Parallel-group pilot RCT + interviews | I-HARP (Interdisciplinary Home-bAsed Reablement Program) | Usual care | 4 months (up to 12 visits by HCPs) | OTs | 18 (9/9) | Not reported | Balance and strength exercises were included as needed | No | No |
| Intervention studies – Not RCTs (n=8) | ||||||||||
| Lewin et al, | Non-randomized controlled trial | HIP (the home independence program). A restorative home-care program | Usual care | Up to 12 weeks. Average 62 days | Nurses | 200 (100/100) | Interventions included promotion of active engagement in a range of daily living activities | Interventions included strength, balance, and endurance programs for improving or maintaining mobility | TUG | No |
| Whitney et al, | Retrospective quasi-experimental two-group design | Usual home care rehabilitation service specially trained in falls identification and prevention (Safe Strides) | Usual home care rehabilitation service | Mean duration in intervention group was 52.6 days | Nurses | 3902 (2121/1781) | Not specifically reported | Targeted exercise programs focused on improving mobility and safety in the home were mentioned in discussion section | No | No |
| Winkel et al, | Non-randomized pilot study | Reablement | (No comparison) | 12 weeks | Home carer | 91 | The role of the home carer was to verbally and physically support and motivate the participant to perform the ADL tasks | Not mentioned | No | No |
| Tinetti et al, | Controlled clinical trial | Restorative care | Usual home care | 3 months | Nurses | 1382 (691,691) | Not reported | The treatment plan included various combinations of exercises and training (not further elaborated, refers to Baker 2001) | No | No |
| Tinetti et al, | Quasi-experi-mental; matched and unmatched | Restorative care | Usual home care | Mean duration 20.3 days ± 14.8 days | Nurses | 770 (410/360) | Treatment plans targeted physical impairments and tasks of daily living. Included training and counseling of participant, family and caregivers (content of training not specified) | Treatment plan included various combinations of exercise | No | No |
| Langeland et al, | Clinical controlled trial in 36 municipalities | Reablement | Standard care | Maximum 10 weeks; mean 5.7 weeks | OTs | 849 (707/121) | Intensive attention was given to encourage participation and stimulate daily training for the participants, including performing their daily tasks themselves. | Exercise programs such as performing exercises to improve strength, balance, or fine motor skills. The exercises were incorporated into daily routines and the participants were encouraged to train on their own. | SPPB | No |
| Slater et al, | A retrospective cohort design | Reablement | No comparison | 6 weeks* | OTs | 416 | Not reported | Not reported | No | No |
| Beresford et al, | Prospective cohort study | Three different reablement services | No comparison | Planned duration was typically 6 weeks, average duration was 3.9 weeks | OTs | 186 | Not reported | Not reported | No | No |
Note: *Information from personal contact with author.
Abbreviations: PA, physical activity; OT, occupational therapist; PT, physiotherapist; RN, registered nurse TUG, timed up and go; RCT, randomized controlled trial; ADL, activities of daily living; SPPB, short physical performance battery.
Other Studies Providing Information of PA Experiences and PA Characteristics
| Author | Aim | Method | Duration of Intervention | HCPs Involved | Informants | PA Characteristics | PA Experiences |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perspectives of older adults | |||||||
| Burton et al, | To identify the motivators and barriers to being physically active for older people receiving either restorative or “usual” home care services | Cross-sectional mixed method study using questionnaire and interviews | Minimum 4 weeks, generally 6–12 weeks* | RNs | Questionnaire: 506 Older adults Interviews: 20 older adults | Not reported | Facilitators/barriers for PA among previous reablement receivers are reported |
| Hjelle et al, | To describe older adults experience of reablement | Qualitative Interviews (part of larger research program; Tuntland 2015) | Max 3 months | OT | 8 older adults | Same as Tuntland 2015 | Own will-power and responsibility is considered important. |
| Wilde et al, | Not clearly stated, but the title informs that the perceptions and experience of users of home-care reablement services are in focus | Interviews | Normally up to 6 weeks, with some flexibility* | Homecare staff with additional training. | 34 service users | Focuses on increasing service users ability to perform tasks such as getting up, washing, bathing, moving around the home and other daily living activities such as preparing drinks and light meals | Expressed frustration at lack of professional expertise to improve/maintain outdoor mobility |
| Moe & Brinchmann, | To generate a grounded theory of service users’ and their caregivers’ experiences of reablement | Grounded theory; focus groups, interviews and observation | Average duration of 6 weeks, maximal duration of 6 months* | Nurse | 17 services users, 10 carers | Includes doing repetitive practice of activities of daily life at home and in the neighborhood. Exercises included based on a detailed screening that identifies activity goals and functional impairments, with a focus on physical strengthening | Values/knowledge of PA are considered. |
| Tuntland et al, | To explore which occupations/activities older people with functional decline find important to improve, which of these they prioritize as their rehabilitation goals, and what factors are associated with these priorities | A cross-sectional study based on data from a nationwide trial (Langeland 2019) | Mean 5.7 weeks (majority between 4 and 6 weeks) | OTs | 738 reablement receivers | Same as Langeland 2019 | Goals related to functional mobility was most often prioritized, followed by goals related to personal care and household activities |
| Whitehead et al, | To provide a detailed description of the content of the occupational therapy intervention that was provided in the OTHERS trial, and to evaluate whether the intervention was acceptable to the participants who received it | Feasibility/evaluation study (Part of a feasibility RCT); questionnaire and interviews | Median length of reablement episode was 56 days (range: 20–126 days) | OT | Interviews: 5 older adults Questionnaire: 8 older adults | Practicing ADL activities was included in intervention | Outdoor mobility goals were difficult to reach due to fluctuations of health condition or weather |
| Magne et al, | To describe how older adults engage in daily activities within the context of receiving reablement and to explore participation in daily activities | Interviews | 6 weeks or less, with some exceptions* | OTs | 10 Older adults. | Not reported | Describes and explores older adults’ experiences of engaging in daily activities and exercises when receiving reablement |
| Perspectives of HCPs | |||||||
| Hjelle et al, | To explore and describe the roles of interdisciplinary teams in reablement services in a Norwegian setting | Focus groups + interviews | Max 3 months in the rural setting, 4 weeks duration in the city | OTs | 27 HCPs (PTs, OTs, Nurses, Auxiliary nurses) | Same as Tuntland 2015 | HCPs considered the reablement organization to be beneficial for reaching more users |
| Jakobsen et al, | To describe HCPs perspectives of next of kin in the context of reablement | Focus groups | Often 4–6 weeks | PTs | 49 HCPs | HCPs assisted the older adults with practicing everyday activities and an individual physical training program | Values/knowledge of PA are considered. |
| Meldgaard Hansen, | To analyze and discuss how the bodywork of homecare develops and is framed as clean, non-dirty work in the context of rehabilitative homecare | Ethnographic fieldwork | Average of 8 weeks in one unit, not specified in the other unit* | PTs | Two homecare units; 30 interviews with homecare workers, managers and administrators, shadow observations of 20 homecare workers | Not reported | HCPs experienced transformation of roles |
| Eliassen et al, | To explore how physiotherapy practice is performed in reablement settings and the content of the service provided to reablement users | Field study | 4–6 weeks (with some exceptions)* | PTs | 7 PTs and 7 allied health personnel | Daily activities were included in reablement plans and could involve getting dressed, showering, and walking to the grocery store. Exercises were provided in all teams, either as mainly standardized exercises or individual adapted exercises. | Experienced beneficial organization for reaching more users |
| Eliassen et al, | To explore how the allied health personnel follow-up instructions and supervision by PTs in reablement | Field study | 4–6 weeks (with some exceptions)* | PTs | 7 PTs and 7 allied health personnel | Same as Eliassen 2018a | Competencies of allied health personnel was considered an important factor. |
| Eliassen et al, | To explore the content of PTs’ supervision of home trainers in reablement teams | Field study | 4–6 weeks (with some exceptions) * | PTs | 7 PTs and 7 allied health personnel (+ 7 clients) | Same as Eliassen 2018a | Competencies of allied health personnel was considered an important factor |
| Eliassen et al, | To investigate and discuss how PTs on reablement teams plan and adapt training interventions to enhance users’ functional abilities | Field study | 4–6 weeks (with some exceptions) * | PTs | 7 PTs and 7 allied health personnel (+ 7 clients) | Identified three main categories of interventions: (i) exercise-based training, (ii) activity-based training, or (iii) a combination of both exercise and activity-based training | Not reported |
| Bodker et al, | To explore how transitioning from compensatory care to reablement care is not merely a practical process, but also a deeply normative one | Ethnographic field work | 8 weeks | OTs | One municipality, involving 31 older people (of which 8 received reablement) Interviews with 13 HCPs | Individualized reablement program includes reablement training. Allied health personnel (upon instruction by health professionals) works to re-enable the older person to manage ADLs | Experienced transformation of roles and mindsets |
| Baker et al, | To describe the development of a restorative model of home care designed to integrate medical treatments for acute conditions with personal care and rehabilitation for chronic disabilities in order to improve older adults’ functional outcomes | Description of design and implementation of a restorative care model | Mean duration of the Restorative care was 24.8 days* | Nurses | Model development within a branch of a homecare agency. Work group included two researchers (RN, PT), two RNs, 2 PTs, two allied health personnel. Staff and six older adults participated in focus groups | Supporting older adults to perform activities themselves. Help patients safely practice regaining function. Prevention of sedentary behavior. Allied health personnel were trained to help patients follow through on prescribed exercises and gait and transfer training | Competencies of allied health personnel was considered an important factor. |
| Burton et al, | To determine whether a lifestyle and functional exercise program (LiFE) was suitable for delivery in a restorative home care service | Feasibility study; Pilot intervention study, including interviews with clients and care managers | Average 7–8 weeks | RNs | 9 clients | Exercises incorporated into daily activities. An individually targeted Lifestyle exercise program as intervention, including strength and balance activities; a standardized exercise program as comparative intervention. Manual delivered, including guidance on how to progress exercises | Simple exercises were considered beneficial. Beneficial with written instructions |
| Liaanen et al, | To provide knowledge regarding how home care service providers working with reablement in the home care setting describe their experiences | Focus groups, grounded theory approach | Time-limited within 6–8 weeks, with some exceptions* | OTs | 25 HCPs (2 OTs, 11, RNs, 4 Health workers, 1 Specialist auxiliary nurse, 4 auxiliary nurses, 1 student nurse, 1 Trainee health worker and 1 social educator) | Not reported | HCPs experienced a shift of care focus from caring to enabling. HCPs emphasized that reablement tended to focus on activities of daily living related to personal hygiene and food preparation, but questioned a lack of focus on outdoor and social activities |
| Zingmark et al, | To explore the characteristics and differences of occupational therapy and physiotherapy in terms of focus (what the intervention was aimed to improve), content (what actions were implemented) and duration within the context of reablement in Swedish municipalities | Surveys | In most cases the duration was within a period of 6 weeks | OTs | 1393 OTs | OTs focused mostly on activities such as walking indoors and self-care. PTs focused mainly on walking indoors and body function | Not reported |
| Perspectives of family members | |||||||
| Hjelle et al, | To explore and describe how family members experience participation in the reablement process | Qualitative; Interviews (part of larger research program; Tuntland 2015) | Max 3 months | OT | Six family members (spouse, child or other kinship) | Same as Tuntland 2015 | Wanted information about how to support for PA. |
| Jakobsen et al, | To identify how adult children perceive the collaboration between older parents, family members, and HCPs in reablement services | In-depth interviews | 4–6 weeks | PTs | Eight daughters, six sons and a daughter-in-law of older adults receiving reablement | Not reported | Some family members wanted information about how to support for PA. |
Note: *Information from personal contact with author.
Abbreviations: PA, physical activity; OT, occupational therapist; PT, physiotherapist; RN, registered nurses; ADL, activities of daily living.