Perceived autonomy support in telerehabilitation by people with chronic respiratory disease: a mixed methods study
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28730Dato
2022-12-24Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Cox, Narelle S.; Lee, Joanna Yt; McDonald, Christine F.; Mahal, Ajay; Alison, Jennifer A.; Wootton, Richard; Hill, Catherine J.; Zanaboni, Paolo; O'Halloran, Paul; Bondarenko, Janet; MacDonald, Heather; Barker, Kathryn; Crute, Hayley; Mellerick, Christie; Wageck, Bruna; Boursinos, Helen; Lahham, Aroub; Nichols, Amanda; Czupryn, Pawel; Corbett, Monique; Handley, Emma; Burge, Angela T; Holland, Anne E.Sammendrag
Research Question - To what degree does telerehabilitation provide an autonomy-supportive environment? What is the patient experience of an 8-week telerehabilitation program?
Study Design and Methods - Individuals undertaking telerehabilitation or center-based pulmonary rehabilitation within a larger randomized controlled equivalence trial completed the Health Care Climate Questionnaire (HCCQ; short form) to assess perceived autonomy support. Telerehabilitation participants were invited 1:1 to undertake semistructured interviews. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and coded thematically to identify major themes and subthemes.
Results - One hundred thirty-six participants (n = 69 telerehabilitation) completed the HCCQ and 30 telerehabilitation participants (42%) undertook interviews. HCCQ summary scores indicated that participants strongly agreed that the telerehabilitation environment was autonomy supportive, which was similar to center-based participants (HCCQ summary score, P = .6; individual HCCQ items, P ≥ .3). Telerehabilitation interview data supported quantitative findings identifying five major themes, with subthemes, as follows: (1) making it easier to participate in pulmonary rehabilitation, because telerehabilitation was convenient, saved time and money, and offered flexibility; (2) receiving support in a variety of ways, including opportunities for peer support and receiving an individualized program guided by expert staff; (3) internal and external motivation to exercise as a consequence of being in a supervised group, seeing results for effort, and being inspired by others; (4) achieving success through provision of equipment and processes to prepare and support operation of equipment and technology; and (5) after the rehabilitation program, continuing to exercise, but dealing with feelings of loss.
Interpretation - Telerehabilitation was perceived as an autonomy-supportive environment, in part by making it easier to undertake pulmonary rehabilitation. Support for behavior change, understanding, and motivation were derived from clinicians and patient-peers. The extent to which autonomy support translates into ongoing self-management and behavior change is not clear.