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Frequency, duration, and type of physiotherapy in the week after hip fracture surgery - analysis of implications for discharge home, readmission, survival, and recovery of mobility

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

O Almilaji, Salma Ayis, Aicha Goubar, Lauren Beaupre, Ian D. Cameron, Rhian Milton-Cole, C. L. Gregson, Antony Johansen, Morten Tange Kristensen, Jay Magaziner, Finbarr Martin, Catherine Sackley, Euan Sadler, Toby O Smith, Boris Sobolev, Katie Sheehan

Original languageEnglish
JournalPHYSIOTHERAPY
Early online date29 Mar 2023
DOIs
Accepted/In press27 Mar 2023
E-pub ahead of print29 Mar 2023

King's Authors

Abstract

Purpose
To examine the association between physiotherapy access after hip fracture and discharge home, readmission, survival, and mobility recovery.

Methods
A 2017 Physiotherapy Hip Fracture Sprint Audit was linked to hospital records for 5,383 patients. Logistic regression was used to estimate the association between physiotherapy access in the first postoperative week and discharge home, 30-day readmission post-discharge, 30-day survival and 120-days mobility recovery post-admission adjusted for age, sex, American Society of Anesthesiology grade, Hospital Frailty Risk Score and prefracture mobility/residence.

Results
Overall, 73% were female and 40% had high frailty risk. Patients who received ≥2 hours of physiotherapy (versus less) had 3% (95% Confidence Interval: 0-6%), 4% (2-6%), and 6% (1-11%) higher adjusted probabilities of discharge home, survival, and outdoor mobility recovery, and 3% (0-6%) lower adjusted probability of readmission. Recipients of exercise (versus mobilisation alone) had 6% (1-12%), 3% (0-7%), and 11% (3-18%) higher adjusted probabilities of discharge home, survival, and outdoor mobility recovery, and 6% (2-10%) lower adjusted probability of readmission. Recipients of 6-7 days physiotherapy (versus 0-2 days) had 8% (5-11%) higher adjusted probability of survival. For patients with dementia, improved probability of survival, discharge home, readmission and indoor mobility recovery were observed with greater physiotherapy access.

Conclusion
Greater access to physiotherapy was associated with a higher probability of positive outcomes. For every 100 patients, greater access could equate to an additional eight patients surviving to 30-days and six avoiding 30-day readmission. The findings suggest a potential benefit in terms of home discharge and outdoor mobility recovery.

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