31. Enhanced in-patient access to physiotherapy and/or occupational therapy
31.1. Introduction
Physiotherapy and occupational therapy are an important component in the recovery from acute illness, particularly in chest disease, injurious falls, stroke and prolonged admission or with pre-existing frailty. More intense therapy would be expected to lead to shorter hospital stays and quicker recovery from immobility caused by illness. Likewise, the risk of physical deterioration from lack of access to therapies over a weekend would be expected to extend hospital stay and increase comorbidities.
Currently, 7-day services are regularly expected in specialist services such as respiratory units, and trauma units, but less so on general medical wards.
31.2. Review question: Is enhanced access to physiotherapy and/or occupational therapy for hospital patients clinically and cost effective?
For full details see review protocol in Appendix A.
31.3. Clinical evidence
We searched for randomised controlled trials comparing the effectiveness of enhanced (7-day a week) inpatient access to physiotherapy and/or occupational therapy versus standard 5-day inpatient access for patients hospitalised with an acute medical emergency.
Two RCTs (3 papers) were included in the review;23,31,50 these are summarised in Table 2 below. Evidence from these studies is summarised in the clinical evidence summary below (Table 3). See also the study selection flow chart in Appendix B, study evidence tables in Appendix D, forest plots in Appendix C, GRADE tables in Appendix F and excluded studies list in Appendix G.
Narrative findings
Length of stay
English 201523 reported a median length of stay of 45.0 days (IQR ±38.0; range 14 to 460) for the 7 day a week therapy intervention group and a median of 55.0 days (IQR ±49.0; range 14 to 240) for the usual care therapy.
Said 201250 reported a median rehabilitation stay of 16 days (IQR 11-27.5; range 8 to 49) for the enhanced access intervention group compared to a median of 15 days (IQR 13.0-22.5; range 8 to 41) for the control group.
Quality of life
English 201523 reported the median overall score of the Australian Quality of Life scale to be 0.2 (IQR ±0.40; range −0.2 to 1.0) for the intervention group and 0.24 (IQR ±0.47; range −0.2 to 1.0) for the usual care group.
31.4. Economic evidence
Published literature
No relevant economic evaluations were identified.
The economic article selection protocol and flow chart for the whole guideline can found in the guideline’s Appendix 41A and Appendix 41B.
New cost-effectiveness analysis
An original cost-effectiveness analysis was conducted for this topic. This is summarised in the economic evidence profile below (Table 4) and is detailed in Chapter 41.
31.5. Evidence statements
Clinical
Older people
- One study comprising 47 people evaluated the role of enhanced access to physiotherapy for improving outcomes in secondary care in older people recovering from an AME. The evidence suggested that enhanced access to physiotherapy and/or occupational therapy may provide benefits in reduced mortality at 3 months (1 study, very low quality) and quality of life (1 study, moderate quality). However, there was no effect on readmission (1 study, high quality), adverse events expressed as non-injurious falls (1 study, low quality) and mortality at discharge (1 study, high quality).
Stroke
- One study comprising 283 people evaluated the role of enhanced access to physiotherapy for improving outcomes in secondary care in adults and young people who are recovering from a stroke. The evidence suggested that enhanced access to physiotherapy and/or occupational therapy had more adverse events - falls and other unspecified events (1 study, low quality) but did provide benefit in a reduced length of rehabilitation (1 study, high quality).
Economic
- Two original cost-utility analyses (cohort model and simulation model) found that extended access to physiotherapy and occupational therapy for people recovering from an acute medical emergency (AME) on the general medical wards was dominant, increasing QALYs and cost saving (cost difference: -£90 per patient). This analysis was assessed as directly applicable with potentially serious limitations.
- One original cost-minimisation analysis (cohort model) found that extended access to physiotherapy and occupational therapy for people presenting in the Emergency Department with a suspected AME was cost increasing (cost difference: +£0.72 per patient) . This analysis was assessed as directly applicable with potentially serious limitations.
- One original cost-utility analysis (simulation model) found that extended access to physiotherapy and occupational therapy for people recovering from an AME on the general medical wards was dominated by standard access. This analysis was assessed as directly applicable with potentially serious limitations.
31.6. Recommendations and link to evidence
References
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Appendices
Appendix A. Review protocol
Appendix B. Clinical article selection
Appendix C. Forest plots
C.1. Enhanced access to therapy – Strata: the Elderly
Appendix D. Clinical evidence tables
Download PDF (333K)
Appendix E. Economic evidence tables
No relevant economic evidence was identified.
Appendix F. GRADE tables
Appendix G. Excluded clinical studies
Appendix H. Excluded economic studies
No relevant economic evidence was identified.
Publication Details
Copyright
Publisher
National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), London
NLM Citation
National Guideline Centre (UK). Emergency and acute medical care in over 16s: service delivery and organisation. London: National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE); 2018 Mar. (NICE Guideline, No. 94.) Chapter 31, Enhanced inpatient access to physiotherapy and occupational therapy.