Levack William M M, Taylor Kathryn, Siegert Richard J, Dean Sarah G, McPherson Kath M, Weatherall Mark
Rehabilitation Teaching and Research Unit, Wellington School of Medicine and Health Science, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Clin Rehabil. 2006 Sep;20(9):739-55. doi: 10.1177/0269215506070791.
To determine the evidence regarding the effectiveness of goal planning in clinical rehabilitation.
Systematic review.
MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, AMED, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, American College of Physicians (ACP) Journal Club, and the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE) were searched for randomized controlled trials on the therapeutic effectiveness of goal planning in the rehabilitation of adults with acquired disability. Studies were categorized by patient population and the clinical context of the study. Data were analysed using best-research synthesis, based on methodological quality determined by Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro) scale scores.
Nineteen studies were included in this review. Study populations in these papers included patients with neurological disorders, psychiatric disorders, musculoskeletal disorders, cardiovascular disorders, respiratory disorders and dietary/endocrine disorders. Six studies investigated the immediate effects of goal planning on patient behaviour. Thirteen studies investigated the effects of goal planning in the context of a rehabilitation programme lasting more than one week. Some limited evidence was identified that goal planning can influence patient adherence to treatment regimes and strong evidence that prescribed, specific, challenging goals can improve immediate patient performance in some specific clinical contexts. However, evidence regarding how these effects translated to improved outcomes following rehabilitation programmes was inconsistent.
This review identified that while some studies demonstrated positive effects associated with goal planning in local contexts, the best available empirical evidence regarding the generalizable effectiveness of goal planning was inconsistent and compromised by methodological limitations.
确定关于目标规划在临床康复中有效性的证据。
系统评价。
检索MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsycINFO、CINAHL、AMED、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库、Cochrane系统评价数据库、美国医师学会(ACP)杂志俱乐部以及循证医学数据库(DARE),以查找关于目标规划对后天性残疾成人康复治疗效果的随机对照试验。研究根据患者人群和研究的临床背景进行分类。基于物理治疗证据数据库(PEDro)量表评分确定的方法学质量,采用最佳研究综合法对数据进行分析。
本评价纳入了19项研究。这些论文中的研究人群包括患有神经疾病、精神疾病、肌肉骨骼疾病、心血管疾病、呼吸系统疾病以及饮食/内分泌疾病的患者。六项研究调查了目标规划对患者行为的即时影响。十三项研究调查了目标规划在持续超过一周的康复计划中的效果。发现了一些有限的证据表明目标规划可以影响患者对治疗方案的依从性,并有强有力的证据表明规定的、具体的、具有挑战性的目标可以在某些特定临床背景下改善患者的即时表现。然而,关于这些效果如何转化为康复计划后改善的结果的证据并不一致。
本评价发现,虽然一些研究表明在局部背景下目标规划有积极影响,但关于目标规划可推广有效性的现有最佳实证证据并不一致,且受到方法学局限性的影响。