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Interventions for enhancing adherence with physiotherapy: A systematic review

McLean, Sionnadh Mairi; Burton, Maria; Bradley, Lesley; Littlewood, Chris

Authors

Sionnadh Mairi McLean

Maria Burton

Lesley Bradley



Abstract

Poor adherence to treatment is commonplace and may adversely affect outcomes, efficiency and healthcare cost. The aim of this systematic review was to identify strategies to improve adherence with musculoskeletal outpatient treatment. Five suitable studies were identified which provided moderate evidence that a motivational cognitive-behavioural (CB) programme can improve attendance at exercise-based clinic sessions. There was conflicting evidence that adherence interventions increase short-term adherence with exercise. There was strong evidence that adherence strategies are not effective at improving long-term adherence with home exercise. Due to the multi-dimensional nature of non-adherence, the strategies to improve adherence with physiotherapy treatment are likely to be broad in spectrum. Combined interventions may be effective at promoting adherence with clinic appointments and exercise, though further research would be required to confirm this. Further research to increase basic understanding of the factors, which act as a barrier to adherence, could facilitate development of strategies to overcome non-adherence.

Citation

McLean, S. M., Burton, M., Bradley, L., & Littlewood, C. (2010). Interventions for enhancing adherence with physiotherapy: A systematic review. Manual Therapy, 15(6), 514-521. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2010.05.012

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 27, 2010
Online Publication Date Jul 14, 2010
Publication Date 2010-12
Deposit Date Dec 20, 2024
Journal Manual Therapy
Print ISSN 1356-689X
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 15
Issue 6
Pages 514-521
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2010.05.012
Keywords Adherence, Intervention, Musculoskeletal, Review