The survivors after hip fracture often report severe pain and loss of physical functioning. The poor outcomes cause negative impact on the person's physical functioning and quality of life and put a financial burden on society. It is important to continue and progress the functional training that already started at the hospital, while the patients are transferred to short-term stays in a nursing home before they are returning to home. The aim presently is to examine the effects of a functional training program by a RCT design, initiated by the physiotherapist and performed by the nurses, on physical functioning while the patients are at short term stays in primary health care.
Functional training, such as walking and transfers, ought to be an important part of the rehabilitation after hip fracture. We have an assumption that it is of utmost importance to continue and progress the functional training that started in the acute phase at the hospital, also during the sub-acute phase while the patients are at short-term stays in nursing homes. However, there are indications of lack of resources in the nursing homes and that the nurses may be less concerned with their role and participation in the patients' rehabilitation process. Possibly, this creates a discontinuity in the rehabilitation efforts during short-term stays that may have a negative impact on the patients' recovery of physical functioning. In this study the aim is to continue and progress the functional training started during hospital stay, such as training in walking and further on repetitive sit-to-stands, as part of the daily habitual routine during short-term stays in the nursing homes. This type of functional training may be motivational and easily recognizable to the patients, and it can also be carried out by the nursing staff with only initial guiding from a physiotherapist. There is lack of knowledge on the effect of additional functional training, incorporated as part of the habitual daily routine during short-term stays, on the patients' immediate and long term recovery of physical functioning and activity level after hip fracture, compared to usual care alone. The study is designed as a single-blind randomized controlled trial (RCT), comparing the effects of additional functional training (functional training group)to usual care alone (control group) during short-term stays in nursing homes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
140
Patients treated for hip fracture participate in a functional training program during their short-term stays at nursing homes. The program is initiated by the nurses 4 times a day for 3 weeks as part of the habitual routine.
Bærum Hospital Vestre Viken, Department of medical research
Sandvika, Drammen, Norway
Change in the performance-based Short physical performance battery (SPPB)
Measurement of physical functioning
Time frame: Change 5 days - 3 weeks, change 5 days - 3 months, change 5 days - 12 months after surgery
Change in the performance-based measure Timed Up & Go (TUG)
Measurement of mobility
Time frame: Change 5 days - 3 weeks, change 5 days - 3 months, change 5 days - 12 months after surgery
Change in the performance-based measure Hand grip strength
Dynamometer
Time frame: Change 5 days - 12 months
Descriptive performance-based measurement of physical activity, an accelerometer (activPAL)
Measurement of physical activity
Time frame: Descriptive from day 5 to 19 after surgery
Pain in rest and while walking
Questionnaire
Time frame: Change 5 days - 3 weeks, change 5 days - 3 months, change 5 days - 12 months after surgery
EuroQol (European quality of life) health status measure
Questionnaire
Time frame: Change 5 days - 3 weeks, change 5 days - 3 months, change 5 days - 12 months after surgery
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) activity scale
Questionnaire
Time frame: Change 5 days - 3 weeks, change 5 days - 3 months, change 5 days - 12 months
New Mobility Scale (NMS)
Questionnaire
Time frame: Change 5 days - 12 months after surgery
Walking Habits
Questionnaire
Time frame: Change 5 days - 3 months, change 5 days - 12 months after surgery
Fall efficacy scale (FES)
Questionnaire
Time frame: Change 5 days - 3 weeks, change 5 days - 3 months, change 5 days - 12 months after surgery
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