Individual specialist physical activity assessment and intervention in advanced cancer patients on a palliative care ward; the 3STEPS-study

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Individual specialist physical activity assessment and intervention in advanced cancer patients on a palliative care ward; the 3STEPS-study. / Blum, David; Schuetz, Christian; Jensen, Wiebke; Wannke, Laurien; Ketels, Gesche; Bokemeyer, Carsten; Oechsle, Karin.

in: ANN PALLIAT MED, Jahrgang 9, Nr. 6, 11.2020, S. 4315-4322.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{ada3758f3ef6483d916ee56c6f0c6476,
title = "Individual specialist physical activity assessment and intervention in advanced cancer patients on a palliative care ward; the 3STEPS-study",
abstract = "The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the feasibility and outcome of an activity assessment and intervention on a specialized palliative care ward. All patients admitted between May 2017 and April 2018 were screened for basic assessment (Step 1). Whenever possible the Tinetti-mobility test (TT) was performed by a physiotherapist. A comparison between physician and nurse-led assessment and patient report was performed (Step 2), followed by a low-intensity individually adapted activity intervention (Step 3). Physical function and global quality of life was measured at intervention start and at discharge. Home care training adherence was controlled by phone call. In total, 437 patients were admitted in one year. In 248 patients, a basic assessment was done of which 131 performed a TT. In this group, median age was 63 years. Types of cancer were gastrointestinal (n=39), lung (n=27), urogenital (n=20), non-cancer (n=26) and other (n=26). Median length of stay was 13 days. Correlations between assessment methods were low to moderate, the highest between the TT and the nurse led assessment. Six patients started the intervention. Four patients completed the intervention, of which two continued with the home based training. In all four patients, an improvement in outcomes was measured. In conclusion in around a quarter of patients on a palliative care ward a TT could be performed. The TT correlated to most with nurse led mobility assessment. In the few accrued patients, the activity intervention showed an effect.",
author = "David Blum and Christian Schuetz and Wiebke Jensen and Laurien Wannke and Gesche Ketels and Carsten Bokemeyer and Karin Oechsle",
year = "2020",
month = nov,
doi = "10.21037/apm-19-472",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "4315--4322",
journal = "ANN PALLIAT MED",
issn = "2224-5820",
publisher = "AME Publishing Company",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Individual specialist physical activity assessment and intervention in advanced cancer patients on a palliative care ward; the 3STEPS-study

AU - Blum, David

AU - Schuetz, Christian

AU - Jensen, Wiebke

AU - Wannke, Laurien

AU - Ketels, Gesche

AU - Bokemeyer, Carsten

AU - Oechsle, Karin

PY - 2020/11

Y1 - 2020/11

N2 - The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the feasibility and outcome of an activity assessment and intervention on a specialized palliative care ward. All patients admitted between May 2017 and April 2018 were screened for basic assessment (Step 1). Whenever possible the Tinetti-mobility test (TT) was performed by a physiotherapist. A comparison between physician and nurse-led assessment and patient report was performed (Step 2), followed by a low-intensity individually adapted activity intervention (Step 3). Physical function and global quality of life was measured at intervention start and at discharge. Home care training adherence was controlled by phone call. In total, 437 patients were admitted in one year. In 248 patients, a basic assessment was done of which 131 performed a TT. In this group, median age was 63 years. Types of cancer were gastrointestinal (n=39), lung (n=27), urogenital (n=20), non-cancer (n=26) and other (n=26). Median length of stay was 13 days. Correlations between assessment methods were low to moderate, the highest between the TT and the nurse led assessment. Six patients started the intervention. Four patients completed the intervention, of which two continued with the home based training. In all four patients, an improvement in outcomes was measured. In conclusion in around a quarter of patients on a palliative care ward a TT could be performed. The TT correlated to most with nurse led mobility assessment. In the few accrued patients, the activity intervention showed an effect.

AB - The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the feasibility and outcome of an activity assessment and intervention on a specialized palliative care ward. All patients admitted between May 2017 and April 2018 were screened for basic assessment (Step 1). Whenever possible the Tinetti-mobility test (TT) was performed by a physiotherapist. A comparison between physician and nurse-led assessment and patient report was performed (Step 2), followed by a low-intensity individually adapted activity intervention (Step 3). Physical function and global quality of life was measured at intervention start and at discharge. Home care training adherence was controlled by phone call. In total, 437 patients were admitted in one year. In 248 patients, a basic assessment was done of which 131 performed a TT. In this group, median age was 63 years. Types of cancer were gastrointestinal (n=39), lung (n=27), urogenital (n=20), non-cancer (n=26) and other (n=26). Median length of stay was 13 days. Correlations between assessment methods were low to moderate, the highest between the TT and the nurse led assessment. Six patients started the intervention. Four patients completed the intervention, of which two continued with the home based training. In all four patients, an improvement in outcomes was measured. In conclusion in around a quarter of patients on a palliative care ward a TT could be performed. The TT correlated to most with nurse led mobility assessment. In the few accrued patients, the activity intervention showed an effect.

U2 - 10.21037/apm-19-472

DO - 10.21037/apm-19-472

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 32921120

VL - 9

SP - 4315

EP - 4322

JO - ANN PALLIAT MED

JF - ANN PALLIAT MED

SN - 2224-5820

IS - 6

ER -