Picha Kelsey J, Valier Alison Snyder, Heebner Nicholas R, Abt John P, Usher Ellen L, Capilouto Gilson, Uhl Tim L
A.T. Still University.
University of Kentucky.
Int J Sports Phys Ther. 2021 Feb 2;16(1):184-194. doi: 10.26603/001c.18957.
Patient adherence to home exercise programs (HEPs) is low, and poor patient self-efficacy is a barrier clinicians can influence. However, little evidence suggests that clinicians assess level of patient self-efficacy before prescribing HEPs.
To determine the importance of patient self-efficacy to physical therapists (PTs) when addressing patient barriers, determine how PTs assess and use patient self-efficacy for HEPs, and describe the barriers facing PTs when assessing patient self-efficacy for HEPs.
Survey.
Practicing PTs were recruited from the American Physical Therapy Association's Orthopedic Section and emailed the electronic survey.
Email invitations were sent to 17730 potential participants, and 462 PTs completed the survey over one month. PTs rated self-efficacy as "very" to "extremely" important for patient adherence (58%, 265/454). Most (71%, 328/462) reported assessing self-efficacy before prescribing HEPs and did so through verbal discussion and observation of the patient (50% and 38% respectively). Half of respondents individualized HEPs through self-efficacy related themes. PTs not assessing self-efficacy reported not knowing how (51%, 68/134), being unsure what to do with the information (24%, 32/134), or reporting other barriers (21%, 28/134).
Most PTs indicated that self-efficacy was important for patient adherence, but assessment strategies reported, such as verbal discussion and observation, may not be the most accurate. PTs who did not assess self-efficacy reported not knowing how or what to do with the information once collected. These findings suggest that there is a gap in knowledge related to how to evaluate self-efficacy for HEPs. Better assessment of self-efficacy may lead to more appropriate and effective implementation strategies.
Level II.
患者对家庭锻炼计划(HEP)的依从性较低,而患者自我效能感差是临床医生能够影响的一个障碍。然而,几乎没有证据表明临床医生在开出HEP之前会评估患者的自我效能水平。
确定患者自我效能感对物理治疗师(PT)解决患者障碍时的重要性,确定PT如何评估和利用患者对HEP的自我效能感,并描述PT在评估患者对HEP的自我效能感时面临的障碍。
调查。
从美国物理治疗协会骨科分会招募执业PT,并通过电子邮件发送电子调查问卷。
向17730名潜在参与者发送了电子邮件邀请,462名PT在一个月内完成了调查。PT将自我效能感评为对患者依从性“非常”至“极其”重要(58%,265/454)。大多数(71%,328/462)报告在开出HEP之前评估自我效能感,并且通过与患者的口头讨论和观察来进行评估(分别为50%和38%)。一半的受访者通过与自我效能感相关的主题对HEP进行个性化调整。未评估自我效能感的PT报告不知道如何评估(51%,68/134),不确定如何处理这些信息(24%,32/134),或报告了其他障碍(21%,28/134)。
大多数PT表示自我效能感对患者依从性很重要,但所报告的评估策略,如口头讨论和观察,可能不是最准确的。未评估自我效能感的PT报告不知道如何评估或在收集信息后如何处理这些信息。这些发现表明,在如何评估HEP的自我效能感方面存在知识差距。更好地评估自我效能感可能会带来更合适、有效的实施策略。
二级。