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Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 11 | Pages 909 - 920
10 Nov 2021
Smith T Clark L Khoury R Man M Hanson S Welsh A Clark A Hopewell S Pfeiffer K Logan P Crotty M Costa M Lamb SE

Aims

This study aims to assess the feasibility of conducting a pragmatic, multicentre randomized controlled trial (RCT) to test the clinical and cost-effectiveness of an informal caregiver training programme to support the recovery of people following hip fracture surgery.

Methods

This will be a mixed-methods feasibility RCT, recruiting 60 patients following hip fracture surgery and their informal caregivers. Patients will be randomized to usual NHS care, versus usual NHS care plus a caregiver-patient dyad training programme (HIP HELPER). This programme will comprise of three, one-hour, one-to-one training sessions for the patient and caregiver, delivered by a nurse, physiotherapist, or occupational therapist. Training will be delivered in the hospital setting pre-patient discharge. It will include practical skills for rehabilitation such as: transfers and walking; recovery goal setting and expectations; pacing and stress management techniques; and introduction to the HIP HELPER Caregiver Workbook, which provides information on recovery, exercises, worksheets, and goal-setting plans to facilitate a ‘good’ recovery. After discharge, patients and caregivers will be supported in delivering rehabilitation through three telephone coaching sessions. Data, collected at baseline and four months post-randomization, will include: screening logs, intervention logs, fidelity checklists, quality assurance monitoring visit data, and clinical outcomes assessing quality of life, physical, emotional, adverse events, and resource use outcomes. The acceptability of the study intervention and RCT design will be explored through qualitative methods with 20 participants (patients and informal caregivers) and 12 health professionals.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 16 - 16
1 Apr 2013
Dunkerley S Goubran A Clark L Talbot N Sharpe I
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There are longstanding debates regarding surgical versus conservative management of Achilles tendon ruptures, however there is limited focus on rehabilitation. A specific rehabilitation programme was initiated in 2008 to unify management and improve patient outcomes. We present the results at three and a half years.

In October 2008 management was streamlined under the foot and ankle surgeons and a dedicated physiotherapy service. Operative management used mainly the Achillon device (Integra) and VACOped boot with a specific rehabilitation protocol.

We prospectively collected data on all patients with Achilles tendon ruptures from October 2008 to March 2012. There were 246 patients in total with four lost to follow up. 80 were treated with the Achillon system, 18 had an open repair and 144 were treated conservatively (of which 56 were partial or musculocutaneous junction tears).

Three patients sustained re-rupture (1.2%), all initially treated conservatively. There were two operative complications (2%), both wound breakdowns. Two patients suffered PE's (0.8%), confirmed on VQ scan or CTPA (one operative, one conservative). One non-compliant patient healed functionally long and required a shortening procedure.

The authors experience has been that using the VACOped boot with our custom rehabilitation programme in dedicated physiotherapy clinics has produced excellent results.