Exploring a new paradigm in outpatient musculoskeletal rehabilitation: chronic disease prevention and facilitating patient self-management

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Publication Type dissertation
School or College College of Health
Department Physical Therapy and Athletic Training
Author Connors, Brian Patrick
Title Exploring a new paradigm in outpatient musculoskeletal rehabilitation: chronic disease prevention and facilitating patient self-management
Date 2018
Description Chronic diseases are causing a higher rate of disability and mortality than ever before. Prevention is paramount to alleviate patient and societal burden. Effective communication from healthcare providers is essential to enable patients to self-manage their chronic diseases. Improving our understanding of self-management approaches for chronic disease in outpatient rehabilitation provides an opportunity for hand therapists to integrate these approaches into practice. A scoping review manuscript examined the current use of motivational interviewing and synthesized the available evidence for motivational interviewing by healthcare professionals in the promotion of self-management behaviors in patients seeking various treatments for musculoskeletal conditions. A thematic analysis manuscript examined thematic patterns describing hand therapists' experiences through guided interviews of hand therapists. Finally, a feasibility and pilot study examined how a chronic disease screen and a brief motivational interview can be integrated into a busy hand therapy clinic and if brief motivational interviewing and written education material results in greater type 2 diabetes self-management program attendance than written educational material alone. These results suggest that motivational interviewing has been utilized by physical therapists (PTs) and occupational therapists (OTs) with success in the self-management of musculoskeletal conditions. The loci of the challenges hand therapists face when addressing self-management of chronic disease have been identified and range from externally imposed to internally imposed challenges. Identifying screens and behavioral interventions to encourage patients at-risk of type 2 diabetes to attend self-management programs are feasible in a hand therapy clinic. The findings of the pilot objective, however, did not demonstrate an additive effect of motivational interviewing above written educational material alone on type 2 diabetes prevention self-management program attendance. Insufficient patient concern, suboptimal patient/provider relationship, insufficient brief motivational interviewing sessions and programs costs may have contributed to the attenuated effect. There remains a need to explore these issues through behavioral interventions with the treating hand therapist. There remains a need to further explore hand therapists' barriers and poor attendance issues through behavioral interventions with the treating hand therapist. iv
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Dissertation Name Doctor of Philosophy
Language eng
Rights Management (c) Brian Patrick Connors
Format Medium application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s6xm4bz9
Setname ir_etd
ID 1678749
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6xm4bz9
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