Physiotherapy Outpatients, University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust, Derby, UK
School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Sep 17;14(9):e079468. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-079468.
This study aimed to understand the lived experiences of patients on the anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) pathway up to 3 months before, 3 months after and 1 year after surgery. Study objectives were to explore (1) patient experiences of preoperative and postoperative treatment, (2) views of/involvement in prehabilitation and (3) sources and consistency of healthcare advice.
Semi-structured interviews analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.
Midlands, England.
Purposive sample of 18 participants aged 18-45. Three identified as female and 15 as male. Participants' ethnic origin was white (n=14), Indian (n=2), British Asian (n=1) and Pakistani (n=1). 10 participants were awaiting ACLR, six were 3months postsurgery and two were 1 year postsurgery.
Participants gave a rich account of ACLR pathway experiences discussing negative impacts of the injury, difficulties with navigating the pathway and making decisions about surgery. Interacting with healthcare professionals and managing the variety of resources, advice and opinions were also highlighted as challenges. Participants reflected on their preoperative journey accounting a wide spectrum of expectations and realities of returning to work and physical activity postoperatively. Prehabilitation was perceived to offer an advantage to recovery, mental well-being, injury knowledge, postoperative rehabilitation and supports a faster return to physical activity. Five themes were identified:Injury experience, impact and support.Navigating the treatment pathway.Sense making in the preoperative period.Uncertainty, expectations and reality of the postsurgical period.Balancing resources, advice and opinions.
This study has illuminated patient experiences of the National Health Service (NHS) ACLR pathway, novel to the evidence base.The results highlight the perceived shortcomings in patient support. They also demonstrate the difficulty patients face when navigating the NHS system, communicating with clinicians, making decisions about treatment and managing conflicting sources of healthcare advice. These problems are more prominent than previously recognised in the literature.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05529511.
本研究旨在了解前交叉韧带重建(ACLR)患者在手术前 3 个月、手术后 3 个月和 1 年的生活经历。研究目的是探讨(1)患者对术前和术后治疗的体验,(2)对术前康复的看法/参与度,以及(3)医疗建议的来源和一致性。
使用反思性主题分析对半结构化访谈进行分析。
英格兰中部地区。
18 名年龄在 18-45 岁之间的参与者,其中 3 名女性,15 名男性。参与者的种族为白人(n=14)、印度人(n=2)、英裔亚洲人(n=1)和巴基斯坦人(n=1)。10 名参与者正在等待 ACLR,6 名参与者术后 3 个月,2 名参与者术后 1 年。
参与者详细描述了 ACLR 通路的经历,讨论了受伤的负面影响、在通路中导航和决定手术的困难。与医疗保健专业人员互动以及管理各种资源、建议和意见也被强调为挑战。参与者反思了他们的术前旅程,描述了他们对重返工作岗位和术后体力活动的广泛期望和现实。术前康复被认为对康复、心理健康、受伤知识、术后康复和支持更快地恢复体力活动有优势。确定了五个主题:受伤经历、影响和支持;治疗途径的导航;术前阶段的意义建构;不确定性、术后的期望和现实;平衡资源、建议和意见。
本研究阐明了患者对国民保健服务(NHS)ACLR 通路的体验,这在证据基础上是新颖的。结果突出了患者支持方面的明显不足。它们还表明,患者在导航国民保健系统、与临床医生沟通、对治疗做出决策以及管理相互冲突的医疗建议来源方面面临困难。这些问题比文献中以前认识到的更为突出。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT05529511。