Effectiveness of telerehabilitation in physical therapy: a rapid overview
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2021Metadata
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Serón, Pamela
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Effectiveness of telerehabilitation in physical therapy: a rapid overview
Author
- Serón, Pamela;
- Oliveros, María José;
- Gutiérrez Arias, Ruvistay;
- Fuentes Aspe, Rocío;
- Torres Castro, Rodrigo Hernán;
- Merino Osorio, Catalina;
- Nahuelhual, Paula;
- Inostroza, Jacqueline;
- Jalil, Yorschua;
- Solano, Ricardo;
- Marzuca Nassr, Gabriel N.;
- Aguilera Eguía, Raúl;
- Lavados Romo, Pamela;
- Soto Rodríguez, Francisco J.;
- Sabelle, Cecilia;
- Villarroel Silva, Gregory;
- Gomolán, Patricio;
- Huaiquilaf, Sayen;
- Sánchez, Paulina;
Abstract
Objective. The purpose of this article was to summarize the available evidence from systematic reviews on telerehabilitation
in physical therapy.
Methods. We searched Medline/PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library databases. In addition, the records in PROSPERO
and Epistemonikos and PEDro were consulted. Systematic reviews of different conditions, populations, and contexts—
where the intervention to be evaluated is telerehabilitation by physical therapy—were included. The outcomes were clinical
effectiveness depending on specific condition, functionality, quality of life, satisfaction, adherence, and safety. Data extraction
and risk of bias assessment were carried out by a reviewer with non-independent verification by a second reviewer. The
findings are reported qualitatively in the tables and figures.
Results. Fifty-three systematic reviews were included, of which 17 were assessed as having low risk of bias. Fifteen reviews
were on cardiorespiratory rehabilitation, 14 on musculoskeletal conditions, and 13 on neurorehabilitation. The other 11 reviews
addressed other types of conditions and rehabilitation. Thirteen reviews evaluated with low risk of bias showed results in
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2 Telerehabilitation: An Overview
favor of telerehabilitation versus in-person rehabilitation or no rehabilitation, while 17 reported no differences between the
groups. Thirty-five reviews with unclear or high risk of bias showed mixed results.
Conclusions. Despite the contradictory results, telerehabilitation in physical therapy could be comparable with in-person
rehabilitation or better than no rehabilitation for conditions such as osteoarthritis, low-back pain, hip and knee replacement,
and multiple sclerosis and also in the context of cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation. It is imperative to conduct better quality
clinical trials and systematic reviews.
Impact. Providing the best available evidence on the effectiveness of telerehabilitation to professionals, mainly physical
therapists, will impact the decision-making process and therefore yield better clinical outcomes for patients, both in these
times of the COVID-19 pandemic and in the future. The identification of research gaps will also contribute to the generation
of relevant and novel research questions.
Patrocinador
Fondecyt Program of National Agency for Research and Development (ANID), Chile 1181734
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Artículo de publícación WoS
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Physical Therapy, 2021;101:1–18
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