Implementation of neurological group-based telerehabilitation within existing healthcare during the COVID-19 pandemic : a mixed methods evaluation

Ackerley, Suzanne and Wilson, Neil and Boland, Paul and Read, Jessica and Connell, Louise (2023) Implementation of neurological group-based telerehabilitation within existing healthcare during the COVID-19 pandemic : a mixed methods evaluation. BMC Health Services Research, 23 (1): 671. ISSN 1472-6963

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Abstract

Background: There is a need to evaluate if and how telerehabilitation approaches might co-exist within healthcare in the long-term. Our aim was to implement and evaluate a multidisciplinary group-based telerehabilitation approach for people engaging in neurological rehabilitation. Methods: NeuroRehabilitation OnLine (NROL) was adapted and implemented within an existing healthcare system as a programme of repeating six-week blocks. A robust evaluation was undertaken simultaneously using a convergent parallel design underpinned by implementation frameworks. This included service data, and patient and staff interviews. Implementation success was conceptualised using the outcomes of appropriateness, acceptability and sustainability. Results: Eight NROL blocks delivered 265 sessions with 1347 patient contacts, and NROL continues as part of standard practice. The approach was appropriate for varied demographics and had positive patient opinions and outcomes for many. Staff perceived NROL provided a compatible means to increase therapy and help meet targets, despite needing to mitigate some challenges when fitting the approach within the existing system. NROL was considered acceptable due to good attendance (68%), low drop-out (12%), and a good safety record (one non-injury fall). It was accepted as a new way of working across rehabilitation disciplines as an ‘extra layer of therapy’. NROL had perceived advantages in terms of patient and staff resource (e.g. saving time, energy and travel). NROL provided staffing efficiencies (ratio 0.6) compared to one-to-one delivery. Technology difficulties and reluctance were surmountable with dedicated technology assistance. Leadership commitment was considered key to enable the efforts needed for implementation and sustained use. Conclusion: Pragmatic implementation of group-based telerehabilitation was possible as an adjunct to neurological rehabilitation within an existing healthcare system. The compelling advantages reported of having NROL as part of rehabilitation supports the continued use of this telerehabilitation approach. This project provides an exemplar of how evaluation can be run concurrently with implementation, applying a data driven rather than anecdotal approach to implementation.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
BMC Health Services Research
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2700/2719
Subjects:
?? brain injurymixed methodsneurologicalrehabilitationstroketelerehabilitationhealth policy ??
ID Code:
217036
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
04 Apr 2024 13:35
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
08 Apr 2024 15:41