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Pelvic Floor Muscle Training strategies to empower patients: a critical Incident qualitative study

Giardulli, Benedetto; Bertoni, Gianluca; Coppola, Ilaria; Buccarella, Ottavia; Testa, Marco; Battista, Simone

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Authors

Benedetto Giardulli

Gianluca Bertoni

Ilaria Coppola

Ottavia Buccarella

Marco Testa



Abstract

Purpose

This study explored the perceived strategies adopted by physiotherapists to empower patients during Pelvic Floor Muscle Training (PFMT).
Materials and methods

A semi-structured interview qualitative study following Flanagan’s Critical Incident Technique (CIT) was conducted. Interviews focused on significant clinical cases related to patient empowerment in PFMT (successful and non-successful cases). Data analysis followed Reflexive Thematic Analysis (RTA).
Results

Eighteen Italian physiotherapists were interviewed (Women N = 16; Men N = 2), and 67 cases were collected and analysed. Five themes were generated, providing a novel, in-depth understanding of patient empowerment in PFMT expanding the focus on physiotherapists’ perspectives: (1) ‘Building a powerful therapeutic alliance’, as participants reported how the patient-physiotherapist relationship was fundamental to get early patients’ empowerment; (2) ‘Debunking myth and managing expectations through education’, crucial to start the empowerment process; (3) ‘Planning tailored and relevant PFMT’, emphasising personalised PFMT plans to empower and engage patients; (4) ‘Creating a caring network of professionals and significant others’, highlighting support from different healthcare professionals patients’ social network; and (5) ‘The importance of continuous remote support in self-management’.
Conclusions

Our results highlighted that PFMT empowerment, from the perspective of this group of physiotherapists, requires a holistic, patient-centered approach that integrates communication, education, collaboration, and continuous support to achieve long-term success. These results provide a comprehensive framework that aligns with existing findings in PFMT patients and holds the potential for shaping future PFMT interventions and informing empowerment strategies for physiotherapists. Future studies should expand on other populations and test PFMT programmes.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 28, 2025
Online Publication Date Feb 6, 2025
Publication Date Feb 6, 2025
Deposit Date Feb 13, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 13, 2025
Journal European Journal of Physiotherapy
Print ISSN 2167-9169
Electronic ISSN 2167-9177
Publisher Taylor and Francis
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Pages 1-14
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/21679169.2025.2462329

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