A therapist-focused knowledge translation intervention for improving patient adherence in musculoskeletal physiotherapy practice

Authors

  • Folarin Omoniyi Babatunde School of Rehabilitation Science, McMaster University, 1400 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON L8S 1C7, Canada
  • Joy Christine MacDermid Hand and Upper Limb Centre, St Joseph Hospital, London, ON, Canada
  • Norma MacIntyre School of rehabilitation Science, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1186/s40945-016-0029-x

Keywords:

Adherence, Exercise, Knowledge translation, Active strategy, Physiotherapy

Abstract

Background: Nonadherence to treatment remains high among patients with musculoskeletal conditions with negative impact on the treatment outcomes, use of personal and cost of care. An active knowledge translation (KT) strategy may be an effective strategy to support practice change. The purpose of this study was to deliver a brief, interactive, multifaceted and targeted KT program to improve physiotherapist knowledge and confidence in performing adherence enhancing activities related to risk, barriers, assessment and interventions. Methods: We utilised a 2-phase approach in this KT project. Phase 1 involved the development of an adherence tool kit following a synthesis of the literature and an iterative process involving 47 end-users. Clinicians treating patients with musculoskeletal conditions were recruited from two Physiotherapy and Occupational therapy national conferences in Canada. The intervention, based on the acronym SIMPLE TIPS was tested on 51 physiotherapists in phase 2. A pre- and post-repeated measures design was used in Phase 2. Graham’s knowledge-to-action cycle was used as the conceptual framework. Participants completed a pre—intervention assessment, took part in a 1-h educational session and completed a post—intervention assessment. A questionnaire was used to measure knowledge of evidence—based treatment adherence barriers, interventions and measures and confidence to perform evidence—based adherence practice activities. Data was analysed using descriptive statistics (frequency and percentage), Fisher’s exact test and Wilcoxon Sign-Ranked tests. Results: Barriers and facilitators of adherence were identified under three domains (therapist, patient, health system) in phase 1. Seventy percent of the participants completed the questionnaire. Results indicated that 46.8% of respondents explored barriers including the use of behaviour change strategies and 45.7% reported that they measured adherence but none reported the use of validated outcomes. A significant improvement in post-selfefficacy scores for the four adherence enhancing activities was observed immediately after the workshop. Conclusion: The use of a multi-modal KT intervention is feasible in an educational setting. A brief interactive educational session was successfully implemented using a toolkit and caused a significant increase in physiotherapists’ knowledge and confidence at performing adherence enhancing activities in the very short-term. Further testing of SIMPLE TIPS on long-term adherence practices could help advance best practices specific to treatment adherence in MSK practice.

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Published

2017-01-06

How to Cite

Babatunde, F. O., MacDermid, J. C., & MacIntyre, N. (2017). A therapist-focused knowledge translation intervention for improving patient adherence in musculoskeletal physiotherapy practice. Archives of Physiotherapy, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40945-016-0029-x

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Section

Research Article

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