Buhagiar Mark A, Naylor Justine M, Simpson Grahame, Harris Ian A, Kohler Friedbert
South West Sydney Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Elizabeth Drive, Liverpool Hospital, Liverpool, NSW, 2170, Australia.
, Level 2, 12 Victoria Rd, Parramatta, NSW, 2150, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2017 Jun 19;17(1):415. doi: 10.1186/s12913-017-2379-9.
To understand private consumer and clinician preferences towards different rehabilitation modes following knee or hip arthroplasty, and identify factors which influence the chosen rehabilitation pathway.
Mixed methods cross-sectional study involving 95 semi-structured interviews of consumers (patients and carers) and clinicians (arthroplasty surgeons, physiotherapists and rehabilitation physicians) in Sydney, Australia, during 2014-2015. Participants were asked about the acceptability of different modes of rehabilitation provision, and factors influencing their chosen rehabilitation pathway. Interviews were in person or via the telephone. Qualitative analysis software was used to electronically manage qualitative data. An analytical approach guided data analysis.
Pre-operative preferences strongly influenced the type of rehabilitation chosen by consumers. Key factors that influenced this were both intrinsic and extrinsic, including; the previous experience of self or known others, the perceived benefits of the chosen mode, a sense of entitlement, the role of orthopaedic surgeons and influence of patient preference, a patient's clinical status post-surgery, the private hospital business model and insurance provider involvement. The acceptability of rehabilitation modes varied between clinician groups.
No one rehabilitation mode provided following arthroplasty is singularly preferred by stakeholders. Factors other than the belief that a particular mode was more effective than another appear to dominate the pathway followed by private arthroplasty consumers, indicating evidence-based policies around rehabilitation provision may have limited appeal in the private sector.
了解膝关节或髋关节置换术后消费者和临床医生对不同康复模式的偏好,并确定影响所选康复途径的因素。
2014年至2015年期间,在澳大利亚悉尼进行了一项混合方法横断面研究,涉及对消费者(患者和护理人员)和临床医生(关节置换外科医生、物理治疗师和康复医生)进行95次半结构化访谈。参与者被问及不同康复提供模式的可接受性以及影响其所选康复途径的因素。访谈通过面对面或电话进行。使用定性分析软件对定性数据进行电子管理。采用一种分析方法指导数据分析。
术前偏好强烈影响消费者选择的康复类型。影响这一选择的关键因素包括内在因素和外在因素,其中有:自我或已知他人的既往经历、所选模式的感知益处、权利意识、骨科医生的作用和患者偏好的影响、患者术后的临床状况、私立医院的商业模式以及保险提供商的参与。康复模式的可接受性在不同临床医生群体中有所不同。
关节置换术后没有一种康复模式受到利益相关者的特别青睐。除了认为某种特定模式比另一种模式更有效的信念之外,其他因素似乎主导着私立关节置换消费者所遵循的途径,这表明围绕康复提供的循证政策在私营部门可能吸引力有限。