Truong Linda K, Mosewich Amber D, Miciak Maxi, Pajkic Andrea, Silvester-Lee Trish, Li Linda C, Whittaker Jackie L
Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Arthritis Research Canada, Vancouver, Canada.
Osteoarthr Cartil Open. 2022 Dec 27;5(1):100333. doi: 10.1016/j.ocarto.2022.100333. eCollection 2023 Mar.
Describe participants' perspectives about the feasibility of a virtual, physiotherapist-guided knee health program for people at risk of post-traumatic osteoarthritis after a sport-related knee injury.
Qualitative description study nested within a quasi-experimental study evaluating the feasibility of the Stop OsteoARthritis (SOAR) with persons with sport-related knee injuries. SOAR includes: 1) one-time Knee Camp (group education, 1:1 exercise/activity goal-setting); 2) weekly home-based exercise/activity program with tracking, and; 3) weekly 1:1 physiotherapy-guided action-planning. Upon program completion, semi-structured 1:1 interviews were conducted with participants identified by convenience and maximum variation sampling (age, gender, program satisfaction). Open-ended questions elicited participants' experiences with the program. Content analysis was conducted.
12 women and 4 men [median (min-max) age; 30 (19-46) years] were interviewed. Four categories depicted participants' experiences: 1) ' portrayed the perceived relevance and need for a program that promotes knowledge about knee health and self-efficacy for independent exercise behaviour, 2) ' described how SOAR empowered participants and fostered a sense of 'leading the charge' to their own knee health, 3) support highlighted that weekly physiotherapy interactions provided accountability for achieving exercise goals, and that relating to other participants was inspirational, 4) suggested enhancements to meet the needs of future participants.
Participants report the SOAR program to be acceptable, relevant, and empowering. Improved knowledge about one's knee health, self-efficacy, autonomy, and social support may encourage exercise adherence and self-management of future knee OA risk.
描述参与者对于一项虚拟的、由物理治疗师指导的膝关节健康计划的可行性的看法,该计划针对运动相关膝关节损伤后有创伤后骨关节炎风险的人群。
定性描述性研究,嵌套于一项准实验研究中,该准实验研究评估了针对运动相关膝关节损伤患者的“停止骨关节炎(SOAR)”计划的可行性。SOAR包括:1)一次性膝关节训练营(小组教育、一对一的运动/活动目标设定);2)每周一次的居家运动/活动计划及跟踪,以及;3)每周一次的一对一物理治疗师指导的行动计划制定。计划完成后,对通过便利抽样和最大变异抽样(年龄、性别、计划满意度)确定的参与者进行了半结构化一对一访谈。开放式问题引出了参与者对该计划的体验。进行了内容分析。
对12名女性和4名男性[年龄中位数(最小值 - 最大值);30(19 - 46)岁]进行了访谈。四个类别描述了参与者的体验:1)“描绘了对一个促进膝关节健康知识和独立运动行为自我效能感的计划的感知相关性和需求”,2)“描述了SOAR如何赋予参与者权力并培养了对自身膝关节健康‘带头负责’的意识”,3)“支持强调每周的物理治疗互动为实现运动目标提供了责任感,并且与其他参与者的交流具有启发性”,4)“提出了改进建议以满足未来参与者的需求”。
参与者报告SOAR计划是可接受的、相关的且具有赋权作用。对自身膝关节健康、自我效能感、自主性和社会支持的了解的改善可能会鼓励未来对膝关节骨关节炎风险的运动坚持和自我管理。