在加拿大,物理治疗师为患有长期慢性阻塞性肺病的成年人提供服务的经验:一项定性研究

Caleb Kim, Chantal Lin, Michelle Wong, Shahd Al Hamour Al Jarad, Amy Gao, Nicole Kaufman, Kiera McDuff, Darren A Brown, Saul Cobbing, Alyssa Minor, Soo Chan Carusone, Kelly K O'Brien
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摘要

目的探讨物理治疗师在加拿大为长期患有 COVID 的成年人提供服务的经验:横断面描述性定性研究,包括在线半结构化访谈。参与者:我们在加拿大招募了一些物理治疗师,他们自称在过去一年中曾在临床上治疗过一名或多名长COVID成人患者:使用访谈指南,我们询问了物理治疗师对 Long COVID 的了解、评估和治疗经验、对物理治疗师角色的看法、影响康复结果的背景和实施因素,以及他们对 Long COVID 康复的建议。我们对访谈进行了录音和逐字转录,并采用小组主题分析法对访谈内容进行了分析。我们还发放了一份人口统计学问卷以描述样本特征:来自 5 个省的 13 名物理治疗师参加了调查,其中大多数为女性(8 人,占 62%),在城市环境中执业(11 人,占 85%)。参与者对现有指南的了解程度不一,过去一年中与长COVID成人患者合作的经验也不尽相同。物理治疗师认为,他们与长COVID成人患者的合作经历是一个动态过程,其中包括1)职业中断(遇到新的患者群体并转向新的护理模式),随后是2)学习曲线的循环过程,以及物理治疗师在与长COVID患者合作过程中不断演变的角色(驾驭不确定性、跟上快速涌现的证据、反复试验、调整心态和康复方法,以及日益突出的倡导者和合作者角色)。与会者建议,需要开展教育和培训,积极、虚心地倾听患者的意见,采用跨学科护理模式,并在组织和系统层面进行改进,以促进患者获得护理:物理治疗师的经历包括对职业的中断,随后是学习曲线的动态过程,以及在 Long COVID 康复中不断演变的角色。并非所有参与者都对现有的 Long COVID 康复指南有深入了解。研究结果可能有助于为Long COVID康复中的物理治疗教育提供参考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Experiences of physiotherapists working with adults living with Long COVID in Canada: a qualitative study
Objectives: To explore experiences of physiotherapists working with adults living with Long COVID in Canada. Design: Cross-sectional descriptive qualitative study involving online semi-structured interviews. Participants: We recruited physiotherapists in Canada who self-identified as having clinically treated one or more adults living with Long COVID in the past year. Data collection: Using an interview guide, we inquired about physiotherapists knowledge of Long COVID, assessment and treatment experiences, perspectives on physiotherapists roles, contextual and implementation factors influencing rehabilitative outcomes, and their recommendations for Long COVID rehabilitation. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using a group-based thematic analytical approach. We administered a demographic questionnaire to describe sample characteristics. Results: Thirteen physiotherapists from five provinces participated; most were women (n=8;62%) and practised in urban settings (n=11;85%). Participants reported variable amounts of knowledge of existing guidelines and experiences working with adults living with Long COVID in the past year. Physiotherapists characterized their experiences working with adults living with Long COVID as a dynamic process involving: 1) a disruption to the profession (encountering a new patient population and pivoting to new models of care delivery), followed by 2) a cyclical process of learning curves and evolving roles of physiotherapists working with persons living with Long COVID (navigating uncertainty, keeping up with rapidly-emerging evidence, trial and error, adapting mindset and rehabilitative approaches, and growing prominence of roles as advocate and collaborator). Participants recommended the need for education and training, active and open-minded listening with patients, interdisciplinary models of care, and organizational- and system-level improvements to foster access to care. Conclusions: Physiotherapists experiences involved a disruption to the profession followed by a dynamic process of learning curves and evolving roles in Long COVID rehabilitation. Not all participants demonstrated an in-depth understanding of existing Long COVID rehabilitation guidelines. Results may help inform physiotherapy education in Long COVID rehabilitation.
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