School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences: Physiotherapy, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; La Trobe Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences: Physiotherapy, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Musculoskelet Sci Pract. 2024 Jun;71:102960. doi: 10.1016/j.msksp.2024.102960. Epub 2024 Apr 16.
Literature reporting positive outcomes from the Good Life with osteoArthritis in Denmark (GLA:D®) program in Australia mainly involves patients attending private physiotherapy services.
Evaluate the feasibility of implementing GLA:D® in Australian public hospitals.
Implementation study in three metropolitan tertiary public hospitals over six months.
Patients aged ≥18 years with knee or hip joint-related problems deemed appropriate for non-surgical care were invited to participate in GLA:D®. Feasibility was evaluated using RE-AIM framework components (Implementation, Effectiveness, Maintenance) using service-level metrics, patient-level data, and program fidelity assessment. Findings of qualitative interviews with service providers are presented in Part 2.
Implementation: 70 patients (69 with knee osteoarthritis) participated (13 cohorts). 55 (79%) patients attended both education sessions, and 49 patients (70%) attended 10-12 exercises sessions. Fidelity was met based on environmental, therapist, participant- and program-related criteria.
At 3 months, patients reported lower average pain (visual analogue scale [0-100 mm]: effect size -0.56, 95% CI -0.88 to -0.23) and disability (HOOS/KOOS-12 [100-0]: 0.67, 0.28 to 1.05), and improved quality of life (EQ-5D overall score: 0.46, 0.11 to 0.80). No adverse events were reported. All patients who completed 3-month assessment (n = 52) would recommend GLA:D®. Maintenance: All participating services elected to continue delivering GLA:D® beyond the study.
Implementing GLA:D® in Australian public hospitals is feasible, safe, and acceptable to patients with knee osteoarthritis. Public hospital patients with knee osteoarthritis reported improvements in pain, disability, and quality of life similar to previous GLA:D® cohorts.
在澳大利亚,文献报告称 Good Life with osteoArthritis in Denmark (GLA:D®) 项目取得了积极成果,该项目主要涉及到接受私人物理治疗服务的患者。
评估在澳大利亚公立医院实施 GLA:D® 的可行性。
在三家大都市三级公立医院进行为期六个月的实施研究。
邀请年龄≥18 岁、膝关节或髋关节相关问题适合非手术治疗的患者参加 GLA:D®。使用服务水平指标、患者数据和项目保真度评估,采用 RE-AIM 框架(实施、有效性、维持)评估可行性。服务提供者的定性访谈结果在第 2 部分中呈现。
实施:70 名患者(69 名膝关节骨关节炎患者)参与(13 个队列)。55 名(79%)患者参加了两次教育课程,49 名(70%)患者参加了 10-12 次锻炼课程。根据环境、治疗师、参与者和项目相关标准,达到了保真度。
在 3 个月时,患者报告疼痛平均程度较低(视觉模拟评分[0-100mm]:效应大小-0.56,95%置信区间-0.88 至-0.23),残疾程度较低(HOOS/KOOS-12[100-0]:0.67,0.28 至 1.05),生活质量提高(EQ-5D 总体评分:0.46,0.11 至 0.80)。无不良事件报告。所有完成 3 个月评估的患者(n=52)均表示会推荐 GLA:D®。
所有参与服务的机构都选择在研究结束后继续提供 GLA:D®。
在澳大利亚公立医院实施 GLA:D® 是可行、安全且可接受的,可改善膝关节骨关节炎患者的疼痛、残疾和生活质量。