General References Flashcards
1
Q
Shared-Decision Making
A
Grenfell et al., 2022 (systematic review)
- 4 main themes trust, communication, decision preferences and decision ability
- Majority of people want to participate in SDM
- Utilise 2-way communication, share power, collaborative relationship, knowing and understanding all options, values and preferences
2
Q
Biopsychosocial Model
A
Cormack et al., 2022 (review)
- BPSM is only partially implemented in physiotherapy
- Biological, psychological and social levels must be taken into account in every healthcare task
- Cake analogy, the cake is the person’s experience, the flour, eggs, salt, and baking powder represent the local processes and how sociocultural context influences psychological and physiological processes
3
Q
Patient-Specific Function Scales
A
Horn et al., 2012
- Construct validity 0.74
- Test re-test reliability 0.84
- Shown to facilitate patient-centred care
- Identify activities they are having difficulty performing and rate them on a scale of 0-10
4
Q
Oxford Grading Scale
A
Cuthbert 2007
- Muscle strength scale from 0-6 (0 = no contraction, 1 = 1 visible contraction no mvmt, 2 = mvmt but no gravity, 3 = mvmt against gravity, 4 = mvmt gravity and some resistance, 5 = mvmt gravity and full resistance)
- Validity = moderate (0.63) criterion when compared to HHD for Neuro Muscular Disease patients
- Reliability = good intra-rater reliability (0.95) moderate inter-rater (0.68)
Very feasible (no equipment required)
5
Q
Numerical Pain Rating Scale
A
Haefeli et al., 2006
- NPRS well documented high pain correlations with other pain assessment tools such as the VRS
- Feasibility of its use and compliance have been proven by Closs et al., 2004 and Farrar et al., 2001
○ Both studies were published in the Pain Journal 7.9 IF
6
Q
Pain Verbal Rating Scale
A
Alghadir et al., 2022
- Validity: good-to-excellent construct when compared to VAS (ICC = 0.88) and NRS (0.93).
- Reliability: Excellent Test-Retest reliability (0.93)
- Feasibility: Excellent. Easy to integrate into practice and requires no special charts, unlike alternatives.
7
Q
Value-Based Care
A
Cook et al., 2021
- recognize the needs of each patient are different
- use patient decisions to support tools (this improves the therapeutic relationship and builds rapport)
- patient experiences and outcomes (PROMs capture the interaction of the patient within the healthcare setting and help to identify if their needs are being met)
- guideline-orientated care
- patient-centredness
- cost-effectiveness