Wheelchairs (WC) are often provided to people with ARSACS and MD1 when they are not able to walk anymore. However, giving someone a MWC alone does not guarantee they will use it safely or properly. Many people who use WC need help from others to get around and they can not always do the things they like to do. This can lead to isolation, stress, and reduced quality of life. In addition, poor use of a MWC could lead to accidents and injuries. Our team recently showed that people with ARSACS have lower MWC skills than other adults who use MWC, and that teaching MWC skills to people with ARSACS seems to work. Now we are ready to test the program with more people with ARSACS and MD1 to see how it can improve MWC mobility and confidence. We also want to hear about people's expectations and experiences with MWC training. People who take part in research will answer questions before and after WC training, and we will follow up with them 3 months later to ask again about their WC use. This projects directly adresses the mobility needs of people with ARSACS and MD1 who use MWC. Our results may improve how therapists provide training for MWC use, which may improve mobility, participation, and quality of life for people with ARSACS and MD1. Learning just one MWC skill could be life-changing. It could mean the difference between leaving the house or not, which could impact the ability to shop for groceries, see friends, or to have a job.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
20
Participants will receive 5, 45-minute weekly WC skills training sessions that will take place in the community, in and around the participants home. Each session will be customized to the participant's' goals and based on the learner's impairments (i.e., weakness, spasticity, movement disorders \[e.g. ataxia, tremor\], contractures, cognition). The WSTP sessions will begin with a 5-minute review of goals/progress, followed by a 10-minute warm-up (wheeling activities, random practice of previously leaned skills); 20 minutes of attempting new skills (training on each skill will be carried to next session until the skills are learned or until the trainer and participant mutually agree that training should be abandoned; the trainer will periodically ask the participant to practice newly learned skills to incorporate variability of practice); 10 minute cool-down, during which the participant will practice skills in a self-controlled environment.
Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Rehabilitation and Social Integration
Québec, Quebec, Canada
Wheelchair Skills Test Questionnaire (WST-Q)
Subjective report of participants' perceived manual wheelchair skills (performance and frequency). The WST-Q comprises 30 discrete manual WC skills. Skills are scored on a scale ranging from 0 (cannot execute skill) to 3 (can execute skill with expertise); a total percentage score (0-100%) is calculated with higher scores representing greater wheelchair skills. The WST-Q can be completed in \~15 minutes, has strong psychometric properties in English and French, and has been used extensively in clinical trials. The WST-Q has been validated by the study team for ARSACS.
Time frame: Baseline (T1); immediately post intervention up to 5 weeks after baseline (T2); 3-months follow-up (T3)
Wheelchair Skills Test (WST)
Objective rating of participants' perceived manual wheelchair skills (capacity). The WST comprises 30 discrete manual WC skills. Skills are scored on a scale ranging from 0 (cannot execute skill) to 3 (can execute skill with expertise); a total percentage score (0-100%) is calculated with higher scores representing greater wheelchair skills. The WST-Q can be completed in \~30 minutes, has strong psychometric properties in English and French, and has been used extensively in clinical trials. The WST-Q has been validated by the study team for ARSACS.
Time frame: Baseline (T1); immediately post intervention up to 5 weeks after baseline (T2); 3-months follow-up (T3)
Wheelchair Use Confidence Scale (WheelCon)
WC use confidence (i.e., belief in ability to accomplish specific tasks while using a manual WC) will be assessed using the Wheelchair Use Confidence Scale for Manual Wheelchair Users Short Form (WheelCon-M). The WheelCon-M comprises 21 statements related to confidence using a MWC in activities and environments, each rated on a scale from 0 ("not confident") to 10 ("completely confident"), producing a total mean score between 0 and10. Higher scores represent higher confidence. The WheelCon-M was validated for ARSACS.
Time frame: Baseline (T1); immediately post intervention up to 5 weeks after baseline (T2); 3-months follow-up (T3)
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