29 results on '"Milton-Cole, R"'
Search Results
2. The role of depression in the association between mobilisation timing and live discharge after hip fracture surgery:Secondary analysis of the UK National Hip Fracture Database
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Milton-Cole, R., Goubar, A., Ayis, S., O'Connell, M. D.L., Kristensen, M. T., Schuch, F. B., Sheehan, K. J., Milton-Cole, R., Goubar, A., Ayis, S., O'Connell, M. D.L., Kristensen, M. T., Schuch, F. B., and Sheehan, K. J.
- Abstract
Purpose The aim was to compare the probability of discharge after hip fracture surgery conditional on being alive and in hospital between patients mobilised within and beyond 36-hours of surgery across groups defined by depression. Methods Data were taken from the National Hip Fracture Database and included patients 60 years of age or older who underwent hip fracture surgery in England and Wales between 2014 and 2016. The conditional probability of postsurgical live discharge was estimated for patients mobilised early and for patients mobilised late across groups with and without depression. The association between mobilisation timing and the conditional probability of live discharge were also estimated separately through adjusted generalized linear models. Results Data were analysed for 116,274 patients. A diagnosis of depression was present in 8.31% patients. In those with depression, 7,412 (76.7%) patients mobilised early. In those without depression, 84,085 (78.9%) patients mobilised early. By day 30 after surgery, the adjusted odds ratio of discharge among those who mobilised early compared to late was 1.79 (95% CI: 1.56–2.05, p<0.001) and 1.92 (95% CI: 1.84–2.00, p<0.001) for those with and without depression, respectively. Conclusion A similar proportion of patients with depression mobilised early after hip fracture surgery when compared to those without a diagnosis of depression. The association between mobilisation timing and time to live discharge was observed for patients with and without depression., Purpose The aim was to compare the probability of discharge after hip fracture surgery conditional on being alive and in hospital between patients mobilised within and beyond 36-hours of surgery across groups defined by depression. Methods Data were taken from the National Hip Fracture Database and included patients 60 years of age or older who underwent hip fracture surgery in England and Wales between 2014 and 2016. The conditional probability of postsurgical live discharge was estimated for patients mobilised early and for patients mobilised late across groups with and without depression. The association between mobilisation timing and the conditional probability of live discharge were also estimated separately through adjusted generalized linear models. Results Data were analysed for 116,274 patients. A diagnosis of depression was present in 8.31% patients. In those with depression, 7,412 (76.7%) patients mobilised early. In those without depression, 84,085 (78.9%) patients mobilised early. By day 30 after surgery, the adjusted odds ratio of discharge among those who mobilised early compared to late was 1.79 (95% CI: 1.56-2.05, p<0.001) and 1.92 (95% CI: 1.84-2.00, p<0.001) for those with and without depression, respectively. Conclusion A similar proportion of patients with depression mobilised early after hip fracture surgery when compared to those without a diagnosis of depression. The association between mobilisation timing and time to live discharge was observed for patients with and without depression.
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- 2024
3. Prognostic factors of depression and depressive symptoms after hip fracture surgery: systematic review
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Milton-Cole, R., Ayis, S., Lambe, K., O’Connell, M. D. L., Sackley, C., and Sheehan, K. J.
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- 2021
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4. The role of depression in the association between mobilisation timing and live discharge after hip fracture surgery: Secondary analysis of the UK National Hip Fracture Database.
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Milton-Cole, R., Goubar, A., Ayis, S., O'Connell, M. D. L., Kristensen, M. T., Schuch, F. B., and Sheehan, K. J.
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HIP fractures , *HIP surgery , *DATABASES , *SECONDARY analysis , *MENTAL depression , *HOSPITAL statistics - Abstract
Purpose: The aim was to compare the probability of discharge after hip fracture surgery conditional on being alive and in hospital between patients mobilised within and beyond 36-hours of surgery across groups defined by depression. Methods: Data were taken from the National Hip Fracture Database and included patients 60 years of age or older who underwent hip fracture surgery in England and Wales between 2014 and 2016. The conditional probability of postsurgical live discharge was estimated for patients mobilised early and for patients mobilised late across groups with and without depression. The association between mobilisation timing and the conditional probability of live discharge were also estimated separately through adjusted generalized linear models. Results: Data were analysed for 116,274 patients. A diagnosis of depression was present in 8.31% patients. In those with depression, 7,412 (76.7%) patients mobilised early. In those without depression, 84,085 (78.9%) patients mobilised early. By day 30 after surgery, the adjusted odds ratio of discharge among those who mobilised early compared to late was 1.79 (95% CI: 1.56–2.05, p<0.001) and 1.92 (95% CI: 1.84–2.00, p<0.001) for those with and without depression, respectively. Conclusion: A similar proportion of patients with depression mobilised early after hip fracture surgery when compared to those without a diagnosis of depression. The association between mobilisation timing and time to live discharge was observed for patients with and without depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Prognostic factors of in-hospital complications after hip fracture surgery: a scoping review
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Sheehan, K.J., Guerrero, E.M., Tainter, D., Dial, B., Milton-Cole, R., Blair, J.A., Alexander, J., Swamy, P., Kuramoto, L., Guy, P., Bettger, J.P., and Sobolev, B.
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- 2019
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6. 1174 THE ROLE OF HIP FRACTURE IN TRAJECTORIES OF DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS AMONG OLDER ADULTS: ANALYSIS FROM THE ENGLISH LONGITUDINAL STUDY
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Milton-Cole, R, primary, Ayis, S, additional, O'Connell, M D L, additional, Smith, T, additional, and Sheehan, K, additional
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- 2023
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7. The impact of the frequency, duration and type of physiotherapy on discharge after hip fracture surgery:a secondary analysis of UK national linked audit data
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Goubar, A., Ayis, S., Beaupre, L., Cameron, I. D., Milton-Cole, R., Gregson, C. L., Johansen, A., Kristensen, M. T., Magaziner, J., Martin, F. C., Sackley, C., Sadler, E., Smith, T. O., Sobolev, B., Sheehan, K. J., Goubar, A., Ayis, S., Beaupre, L., Cameron, I. D., Milton-Cole, R., Gregson, C. L., Johansen, A., Kristensen, M. T., Magaziner, J., Martin, F. C., Sackley, C., Sadler, E., Smith, T. O., Sobolev, B., and Sheehan, K. J.
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Summary: Additional physiotherapy in the first postoperative week was associated with fewer days to discharge after hip fracture surgery. A 7-day physiotherapy service in the first postoperative week should be considered as a new key performance indicator in evaluating the quality of care for patients admitted with a hip fracture. Introduction: To examine the association between physiotherapy in the first week after hip fracture surgery and discharge from acute hospital. Methods: We linked data from the UK Physiotherapy Hip Fracture Sprint Audit to hospital records for 5395 patients with hip fracture in May and June 2017. We estimated the association between the number of days patients received physiotherapy in the first postoperative week; its overall duration (< 2 h, ≥ 2 h; 30-min increment) and type (mobilisation alone, mobilisation and exercise) and the cumulative probability of discharge from acute hospital over 30 days, using proportional odds regression adjusted for confounders and the competing risk of death. Results: The crude and adjusted odds ratios of discharge were 1.24 (95% CI 1.19–1.30) and 1.26 (95% CI 1.19–1.33) for an additional day of physiotherapy, 1.34 (95% CI 1.18–1.52) and 1.33 (95% CI 1.12–1.57) for ≥ 2 versus < 2 h physiotherapy, and 1.11 (95% CI 1.08–1.15) and 1.10 (95% CI 1.05–1.15) for an additional 30-min of physiotherapy. Physiotherapy type was not associated with discharge. Conclusion: We report an association between physiotherapy and discharge after hip fracture. An average UK hospital admitting 375 patients annually may save 456 bed-days if current provision increased so all patients with hip fracture received physiotherapy on 6–7 days in the first postoperative week. A 7-day physiotherapy service totalling at least 2 h in the first postoperative week may be considered a key performance indicator of acute care quality after hip fracture.
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- 2022
8. 661 PROGNOSTIC FACTORS OF DEPRESSION AFTER HIP FRACTURE SURGERY: SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
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Milton-Cole, R, primary, Ayis, S, additional, Lambe, K, additional, O’Connell, M D L, additional, Sackley, C, additional, and Sheehan, K J, additional
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- 2022
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9. Prognostic factors of depression after hip fracture surgery: Systematic review
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Milton-Cole, R., primary, Lambe, K., additional, Ayis, S., additional, O’Connell, M., additional, and Sheehan, K., additional
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- 2022
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10. The impact of the frequency, duration and type of physiotherapy on discharge after hip fracture surgery: a secondary analysis of UK national linked audit data
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Goubar, A., primary, Ayis, S., additional, Beaupre, L., additional, Cameron, I. D., additional, Milton-Cole, R., additional, Gregson, C. L., additional, Johansen, A., additional, Kristensen, M. T., additional, Magaziner, J., additional, Martin, F. C., additional, Sackley, C., additional, Sadler, E., additional, Smith, T. O., additional, Sobolev, B., additional, and Sheehan, K. J., additional
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- 2021
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11. THE CONNUNDRUM OF DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOM-FRAILTY commorbidty AND OVERLAP
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Milton-Cole, R, primary and Stubbs, B, additional
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- 2021
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12. Additional file 1 of Prognostic factors of depression and depressive symptoms after hip fracture surgery: systematic review
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Milton-Cole, R., Ayis, S., Lambe, K., O’Connell, M. D. L., Sackley, C., and Sheehan, K. J.
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Additional file 1: Appendix 1. Search strategies.
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- 2021
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13. Additional file 2 of Prognostic factors of depression and depressive symptoms after hip fracture surgery: systematic review
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Milton-Cole, R., Ayis, S., Lambe, K., O’Connell, M. D. L., Sackley, C., and Sheehan, K. J.
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Data_FILES - Abstract
Additional file 2.
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- 2021
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14. Inequity in rehabilitation interventions after hip fracture: a systematic review
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Sheehan, K J, primary, Fitzgerald, L, additional, Hatherley, S, additional, Potter, C, additional, Ayis, S, additional, Martin, F C, additional, Gregson, C L, additional, Cameron, I D, additional, Beaupre, L A, additional, Wyatt, D, additional, Milton-Cole, R, additional, DiGiorgio, S, additional, and Sackley, C, additional
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- 2019
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15. Prognostic Factors of Depression After Hip Fracture Surgery: Systematic Review.
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Milton-Cole, R., Ayis, S., Lambe, K., O'Connell, M., and Sackley, C.
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HIP fractures ,PROGNOSIS ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,OLDER people ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Introduction: Patients with hip fracture and depression are less likely to recover. This review aimed to identify prognostic factors of depression up to one year after hip fracture surgery in adults. Secondary aims were to determine whether identified factors are modifiable or non-modifiable and describe proposed underlying mechanisms for their association with depression. Methods: We searched MEDLINE, Embase, PsychInfo, CINAHL and Web of Science Core Collection databases for published studies. We searched OpenGrey, Greynet and BASE and conference proceedings for unpublished studies. We identified any further relevant studies from the reference lists of included studies. We did not impose any date, geographical, or language limitations. Two reviewers independently screened studies against predefined eligibility criteria to identify relevant papers. We included observational studies investigating prognostic factors of depression up to one year after surgery in adults surgically managed for non-pathological hip fracture. We resolved conflicts by consensus. Two reviewers independently extracted data (Checklist for critical Appraisal and data extraction for systematic Reviews of prediction Modelling Studies, adapted for use with prognostic factors studies Checklist) and completed quality appraisal (using Quality in Prognosis Studies tool). We resolved conflicts by consensus. Results: 3,402 studies were identified, 2,915 studies were excluded leaving 13 studies included in this review. 3,769 patients were included across all studies with a mean age ranging from 76.21 to 81.82 years. A total of 39 prognostic factors were investigated and most studies failed to identify a primary prognostic factor of interest. Most of these factors were patient factors with only a few being process or structure factors. Conclusion: Various potential prognostic factors of depression after hip fracture were identified; however, methodological quality and heterogeneity between studies limited the certainty of which prognostic factors were the strongest. High-quality research investigating prognostic factors using the same study design, methodology and measurements is warranted to allow for comparisons of the predictive power of factors, as well as future research into the underlying mechanisms of prognostic factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Using patient and care partner experiences to confirm outcomes of relevance for inclusion in a core outcome set for trials of physical rehabilitation in critical illness: A qualitative interview study.
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Connolly B, Milton-Cole R, Blackwood B, and Pattison N
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Caregivers psychology, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Critical Illness rehabilitation, Qualitative Research, Interviews as Topic
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Background: Incorporating the perspectives of patients and care partners is crucial in the development of core outcome sets. One effective approach for achieving this involvement is by seeking input to refine the outcomes for consensus. The objectives of the study were to: i) to determine patient and care partner views on outcomes that should be measured in trials of physical rehabilitation interventions across the critical illness recovery continuum; (ii) to map these views with a pre-established list of thirty outcomes for potential inclusion in a core outcome set for these trials; and (iii) to identify any new outcomes that could be considered for inclusion., Methods: A qualitative semistructured telephone interview study was conducted with a convenience sample of post-critical illness patients and care partners, as part of core outcome set development work. Anonymised interview transcripts were analysed using a framework approach, and exemplary narrative quotes from participants were reported used to illustrate outcome reporting., Findings: Fourteen participants were recruited (male:female ratio = 8:6, age range [minimum-maximum]: 50-80 years, 13 former patients, one spouse). Time since intensive care unit discharge ranged from less than 1 year to 10 years at the time of interview. Participants described a range of outcomes that could be measured in trials of physical rehabilitation after critical illness that mapped closely with the pre-established list. No new outcomes were introduced by participants during the interviews. Experiences described by participants commonly reflected outcomes related to physical ability and performance, functional level, activities of daily living, and emotional and mental wellbeing. Participants spoke to how the different outcomes directly impacted their day-to-day lives and highlighted their priorities centred around resumption of tasks and activities that had value to them at personal, functional, and societal level., Conclusion: Qualitative interviews confirmed the relevance of existing outcomes for potential inclusion in a core outcome set for trials of physical rehabilitation interventions across the critical illness recovery continuum. The added significance of our findings is to provide real-world meaning to these outcomes., Registration: COMET Initiative, ID288, https://www.comet-initiative.org/studies/details/288., (Copyright © 2024 Australian College of Critical Care Nurses Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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17. Author response to: OSIN-D-24-00452, "Comment on: Effectiveness of exercise rehabilitation interventions on depressive symptoms in older adults post hip fracture: a systematic review and meta-analysis".
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Milton-Cole R and Sheehan KJ
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- Aged, Humans, Depression rehabilitation, Depression etiology, Meta-Analysis as Topic, Osteoporotic Fractures rehabilitation, Osteoporotic Fractures prevention & control, Osteoporotic Fractures psychology, Treatment Outcome, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Exercise Therapy methods, Hip Fractures rehabilitation
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- 2024
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18. Response to Letter to the Editor on "Effectiveness and Equity in Community-based Rehabilitation on Pain, Physical Function, and Quality of Life Following Unilateral Lower Limb Amputation: A Systematic Review".
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Wijekoon A, Jayawardana S, Milton-Cole R, Chandrathilake K, Jones A, Cook S, Morrison E, and Sheehan KJ
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- Humans, Quality of Life, Amputation, Surgical rehabilitation, Lower Extremity surgery
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- 2024
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19. Factors associated with concerns about falling and activity restriction in older adults after hip fracture: a mixed-methods systematic review.
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Guerra S, Ellmers T, Turabi R, Law M, Chauhan A, Milton-Cole R, Godfrey E, and Sheehan KJ
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Activities of Daily Living, Postural Balance, Accidental Falls, Hip Fractures psychology
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Purpose: To investigate factors contributing to concerns about falling and activity restriction in the community among older adults who had a hip fracture., Methods: A mixed method systematic review with a convergent segregated approach. We searched Medline, Embase, PsycInfo, PEDRo, CINAHL and the Cochrane library. Results were synthesised narratively considering physical, psychological, environmental, care, and social factors and presented in tables. Critical appraisal was completed in duplicate., Results: We included 19 studies (9 qualitative, 9 observational, 1 mixed methods) representing 1480 individuals and 23 factors related to concerns about falling and activity restriction. Physical factors included falls history, comorbidities, balance, strength, mobility and functionality. Psychological factors included anxiety and neuroticism scores, perceived confidence in/control over rehabilitation and abilities, and negative/positive affect about the orthopaedic trauma, pre-fracture abilities and future needs. Environmental factors included accessibility in the home, outdoors and with transport. Social and care factors related to the presence or absence of formal and informal networks, which reduced concerns and promoted activity by providing feedback, advice, encouragement, and practical support., Conclusion: These findings highlight that to improve concerns about falling and activity restriction after hip fracture, it is important to: improve physical and functional abilities; boost self-confidence; promote positive affect; involve relatives and carers; increase access to clinicians, and; enhance accessibility of the home, outdoors and transport. Most factors were reported on by a small number of studies of varying quality and require replication in future research., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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20. Effectiveness of exercise rehabilitation interventions on depressive symptoms in older adults post hip fracture: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Milton-Cole R, Kazeem K, Gibson A, Guerra S, and Sheehan KJ
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- Humans, Aged, Exercise Therapy methods, Quality of Life, Depression etiology, Hip Fractures
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This study determines the effectiveness of exercise rehabilitation interventions on depressive symptoms in older adults after hip fracture. Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, Global Health, APAPsych, CENTRAL, CIHAHL, PEDro and Open Grey were searched from database inception to June 10, 2022 for definitive, pilot or feasibility randomised controlled trials of rehabilitation interventions (versus any comparator) which reported depressive symptoms among older adults post hip fracture. Nonrandomised trials and those not published in English were excluded. Selection, quality appraisal (Cochrane Risk of Bias 2) and extraction in duplicate. Results were synthesised narratively and with meta-analysis (Hedge's g for intervention effect, I2 for heterogeneity). Eight trials (1146 participants) were included. Interventions were predominantly face-to-face exercise rehabilitation (range three to 56 sessions) at home versus usual care. Three trials were assigned overall low risk of bias, three some concerns and two high risk. The pooled effect of rehabilitation on depressive symptoms at intervention end favoured the intervention group (Hedges's g -0.43; 95% CI: -0.87, 0.01; four trials). Three trials demonstrated no between group difference following adjustment for baseline depressive symptoms. One trial found lower odds of depression when the intervention additionally included falls prevention, nutrition consultation and depression management. There is a potential benefit of exercise rehabilitation interventions on depressive symptoms after hip fracture. A mechanism for benefit may relate to baseline symptom severity, exercise frequency, frequency of health professional contacts, addition of a psychological component or of the quality of the underlying trials. To appropriately inform clinical guidelines, further appropriately powered trials with follow-up are warranted. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: CRD42022342099., (© 2023. International Osteoporosis Foundation and Bone Health and Osteoporosis Foundation.)
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- 2024
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21. The role of depression in the association between physiotherapy frequency and duration and outcomes after hip fracture surgery: secondary analysis of the physiotherapy hip fracture sprint audit.
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Milton-Cole R, O'Connell MDL, Sheehan KJ, and Ayis S
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- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, United Kingdom epidemiology, Middle Aged, Patient Discharge, Patient Readmission statistics & numerical data, Logistic Models, Treatment Outcome, Hip Fractures surgery, Hip Fractures rehabilitation, Physical Therapy Modalities, Depression epidemiology
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Purpose: It is not known whether the association between the frequency and duration of physiotherapy and patient outcomes varies for those with and without depression. This study aims to evaluate whether the associations between the frequency and duration of physiotherapy after hip fracture surgery and discharge home, surviving at 30 days post-admission, and being readmitted 30 days post discharge vary by depression diagnosis., Methods: Data were from 5005 adults aged 60 and over included in the UK Physiotherapy Hip Fracture Sprint Audit who had undergone surgery for a nonpathological first hip fracture. Logistic regression models were used to estimate the unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios and their 95% confidence intervals for the associations between physiotherapy frequency and duration and outcomes., Results: Physiotherapy frequency and duration were comparable between patients with and without depression (42.1% and 44.6%). The average adjusted odds for a 30-min increase in physiotherapy duration for those with and without depression for discharge home were 1.05 (95% CI 0.85-1.29) vs 1.16 (95% CI 1.05-1.28, interaction p = 0.36), for 30-day survival were 1.26 (95% CI 1.06-1.50) vs 1.11 (95% CI 1.05-1.17, interaction p = 0.45) and for readmission were 0.89 (95% CI 0.81-0.98) vs 0.97 (95% CI 0.93-1.00, interaction p = 0.09). None of the interaction tests reached formal significance, but the readmission models were close (p = 0.09)., Conclusion: Results suggest physiotherapy duration may be negatively associated with readmission in those with depression but not those without depression, while no clear difference in the other outcomes was noted., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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22. Effectiveness and Equity in Community-Based Rehabilitation on Pain, Physical Function, and Quality of Life After Unilateral Lower Limb Amputation: A Systematic Review.
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Wijekoon A, Jayawardana S, Milton-Cole R, Chandrathilaka M, Jones A, Cook S, Morrison E, and Sheehan KJ
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- Adult, Humans, Pain, Amputation, Surgical, Lower Extremity surgery, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Quality of Life, Exercise Therapy methods
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Objectives: To synthesize evidence for (1) the effectiveness of exercise-based rehabilitation interventions in the community and/or at home after transfemoral and transtibial amputation on pain, physical function, and quality of life and (2) the extent of inequities (unfair, avoidable differences in health) in access to identified interventions., Data Sources: Embase, MEDLINE, PEDro, Cinahl, Global Health, PsycINFO, OpenGrey, and ClinicalTrials.gov were systematically searched from inception to August 12, 2021, for published, unpublished, and registered ongoing randomized controlled trials., Study Selection: Three review authors completed screening and quality appraisal in Covidence using the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool. Included were randomized controlled trials of exercise-based rehabilitation interventions based in the community or at home for adults with transfemoral or transtibial amputation that assessed effectiveness on pain, physical function, or quality of life., Data Extraction: Effectiveness data were extracted to templates defined a priori and the PROGRESS-Plus framework was used for equity factors., Data Synthesis: Eight completed trials of low to moderate quality, 2 trial protocols, and 3 registered ongoing trials (351 participants across trials) were identified. Interventions included cognitive behavioral therapy, education, and video games, combined with exercise. There was heterogeneity in the mode of exercise as well as outcome measures employed. Intervention effects on pain, physical function, and quality of life were inconsistent. Intervention intensity, time of delivery, and degree of supervision influenced reported effectiveness. Overall, 423 potential participants were inequitably excluded from identified trials (65%), limiting the generalizability of interventions to the underlying population., Conclusions: Interventions that were tailored, supervised, of higher intensity, and not in the immediate postacute phase showed greater promise for improving specific physical function outcomes. Future trials should explore these effects further and employ more inclusive eligibility to optimize any future implementation., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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23. Frequency, duration, and type of physiotherapy in the week after hip fracture surgery - analysis of implications for discharge home, readmission, survival, and recovery of mobility.
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Almilaji O, Ayis S, Goubar A, Beaupre L, Cameron ID, Milton-Cole R, Gregson CL, Johansen A, Kristensen MT, Magaziner J, Martin FC, Sackley C, Sadler E, Smith TO, Sobolev B, and Sheehan KJ
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- Humans, Female, United States, Male, Patient Discharge, Patient Readmission, Aftercare, Physical Therapy Modalities, Frailty, Hip Fractures surgery
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Purpose: To examine the association between physiotherapy access after hip fracture and discharge home, readmission, survival, and mobility recovery., Methods: A 2017 Physiotherapy Hip Fracture Sprint Audit was linked to hospital records for 5383 patients. Logistic regression was used to estimate the association between physiotherapy access in the first postoperative week and discharge home, 30-day readmission post-discharge, 30-day survival and 120-days mobility recovery post-admission adjusted for age, sex, American Society of Anesthesiology grade, Hospital Frailty Risk Score and prefracture mobility/residence., Results: Overall, 73% were female and 40% had high frailty risk. Patients who received ≥2 hours of physiotherapy (versus less) had 3% (95% Confidence Interval: 0-6%), 4% (2-6%), and 6% (1-11%) higher adjusted probabilities of discharge home, survival, and outdoor mobility recovery, and 3% (0-6%) lower adjusted probability of readmission. Recipients of exercise (versus mobilisation alone) had 6% (1-12%), 3% (0-7%), and 11% (3-18%) higher adjusted probabilities of discharge home, survival, and outdoor mobility recovery, and 6% (2-10%) lower adjusted probability of readmission. Recipients of 6-7 days physiotherapy (versus 0-2 days) had 8% (5-11%) higher adjusted probability of survival. For patients with dementia, improved probability of survival, discharge home, readmission and indoor mobility recovery were observed with greater physiotherapy access., Conclusion: Greater access to physiotherapy was associated with a higher probability of positive outcomes. For every 100 patients, greater access could equate to an additional eight patients surviving to 30-days and six avoiding 30-day readmission. The findings suggest a potential benefit in terms of home discharge and outdoor mobility recovery. CONTRIBUTION OF THE PAPER., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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24. Effectiveness of eHealth weight management interventions in overweight and obese adults from low socioeconomic groups: a systematic review.
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Myers-Ingram R, Sampford J, Milton-Cole R, and Jones GD
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- Humans, Adult, Obesity therapy, Electronics, Weight Loss, Socioeconomic Factors, Overweight therapy, Telemedicine
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Background: Low socioeconomic status (SES) is associated with increased rates of overweight and obesity. Proponents of electronic health (eHealth) hypothesise that its inclusion in weight management interventions can improve efficacy by mitigating typical barriers associated with low SES., Objectives: To establish the scope of eHealth weight management interventions for people with overweight and obesity from a low SES. Secondary objectives were to determine the efficacy of eHealth interventions in facilitating weight loss, physical activity and fitness improvements., Methods: Four databases and grey literature were systematically searched to identify eligible studies published in English from inception to May 2021. Studies examining an eHealth intervention with low SES participants were included. Outcomes included temporal change in weight and BMI, anthropometry, physiological measures and physical activity levels. The number and heterogeneity of studies precluded any meta-analyses; thus, a narrative review was undertaken., Results: Four experimental studies with low risk of bias were reviewed. There was variance in how SES was defined. Study aims and eHealth media also varied and included reducing/maintaining weight or increasing physical activity using interactive websites or voice responses, periodic communication and discourse via telephone, social media, text messaging or eNewsletters. Irrespectively, all studies reported short-term weight loss. eHealth interventions also increased short-term physical activity levels where it was assessed, but did not change anthropometry or physiological measures. None reported any effect on physical fitness., Conclusions: This review revealed short-term effects of eHealth interventions on weight loss and increased physical activity levels for low SES participants. Evidence was limited to a small number of studies, with small to moderate sample sizes. Inter-study comparison is challenging because of considerable variability. Future work should prioritise how to utilise eHealth in the longer term either as a supportive public health measure or by determining its long-term efficacy in engendering volitional health behaviour changes., Systematic Review Registration: PROSPERO CRD42021243973., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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25. Trajectories of Depressive Symptoms Among Older Adults and in Adults With Hip Fracture: Analysis From the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing.
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Milton-Cole R, Ayis S, O'Connell MDL, Smith T, and Sheehan KJ
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- Humans, Female, Aged, Male, Longitudinal Studies, Aging, England epidemiology, Depression epidemiology, Hip Fractures epidemiology
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Background: This study aimed to determine trajectories of depressive symptoms among older adults in England, overall and for those with hip fracture. The study aimed to explore the differential characteristics of each trajectory identified., Methods: Analysis of adults aged 60 years or more (n = 7 050), including a hip fracture subgroup (n = 384), from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. Latent class growth mixture modeling was completed. Depressive symptom prevalence was estimated at baseline. Chi-square tests were completed to compare baseline characteristics across trajectories., Results: Three trajectories of depressive symptoms (no, mild, and moderate-severe) were identified overall and for those with hip fracture. The moderate-severe trajectory comprised 13.7% and 7% of participants for overall and hip fracture populations, respectively. The proportion of participants with depressive symptoms in the moderate-severe trajectory was 65.4% and 85.2% for overall and hip fracture populations, respectively. Depressive symptoms were stable over time, with a weak trend toward increasing severity for the moderate-severe symptom trajectory. Participants in the moderate-severe symptom trajectory were older, more likely to be female, live alone, and had worse health measures than other trajectories (p < .001)., Conclusions: Older adults, and those with hip fracture, follow one of the 3 trajectories of depressive symptoms that are broadly stable over time. Depressive symptoms' prevalence was higher for those with hip fracture and, when present, the symptoms were more severe than the overall population. Results suggest a role of factors including age, gender, and marital status in depressive symptom trajectories., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America.)
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- 2022
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26. The effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions including outdoor mobility on older adults' physical activity, endurance, outdoor mobility and falls-related self-efficacy: systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Geohagen O, Hamer L, Lowton A, Guerra S, Milton-Cole R, Ellery P, Martin FC, Lamb SE, Sackley C, and Sheehan KJ
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- Aged, Anxiety, Humans, Nutritional Status, Walking, Exercise, Independent Living
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the effectiveness of community-based rehabilitation interventions which incorporate outdoor mobility on physical activity, endurance, outdoor mobility and falls-related self-efficacy in older adults., Design: MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, PEDro and OpenGrey were searched systematically from inception to June 2021 for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of community-based rehabilitation incorporating outdoor mobility on physical activity, endurance, outdoor mobility and/or falls-related self-efficacy in older adults. Duplicate screening, selection, extraction and appraisal were completed. Results were reported descriptively and with random-effects meta-analyses stratified by population (proactive [community-dwelling], reactive [illness/injury])., Results: A total of 29 RCTs with 7,076 participants were identified (66% high bias for at least one domain). The outdoor mobility component was predominantly a walking programme with behaviour change. Rehabilitation for reactive populations increased physical activity (seven RCTs, 587 participants. Hedge's g 1.32, 95% CI: 0.31, 2.32), endurance (four RCTs, 392 participants. Hedges g 0.24; 95% CI: 0.04, 0.44) and outdoor mobility (two RCTs with 663 participants. Go out as much as wanted, likelihood of a journey) at intervention end versus usual care. Where reported, effects were preserved at follow-up. One RCT indicated a benefit of rehabilitation for proactive populations on moderate-to-vigorous activity and outdoor mobility. No effect was noted for falls-related self-efficacy, or other outcomes following rehabilitation for proactive populations., Conclusion: Reactive rehabilitation for older adults may include walking programmes with behaviour change techniques. Future research should address the potential benefit of a walking programme for proactive populations and address mobility-related anxiety as a barrier to outdoor mobility for both proactive and reactive populations., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2022
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27. Outcomes Following eHealth Weight Management Interventions in Adults With Overweight and Obesity From Low Socioeconomic Groups: Protocol for a Systematic Review.
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Myers-Ingram R, Sampford J, Milton-Cole R, and Jones GD
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Background: Obesity is a complex health condition with multiple associated comorbidities and increased economic costs. People from low socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds are more likely to be overweight and obese and are less successful in traditional weight management programs. It is possible that eHealth interventions may be more successful in reaching people from low SES groups than traditional face-to-face models, by overcoming certain barriers associated with traditional interventions. It is not yet known, however, if eHealth weight management interventions are effective in people living with overweight and obesity from a low SES background., Objective: The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of eHealth weight management interventions for people with overweight and obesity from low SES groups., Methods: A systematic review on relevant electronic databases (MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare, and CINAHL) will be undertaken to identify eligible studies published in English up until May 2021. Using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) statement to guide the systematic review, two reviewers will independently screen, select, and extract data and complete a risk of bias assessment of search results according to predefined criteria. Studies that have investigated an eHealth weight management intervention within a low SES population will be included. Primary outcomes include weight, BMI, and percentage weight change compared at baseline and at least one other time point. Secondary outcomes may include a range of anthropometric and physical fitness and activity measures. If sufficient studies are homogeneous, then we will pool results of individual outcomes using meta-analysis., Results: Searches have been completed, resulting in 2256 studies identified. Once duplicates were removed, 1545 studies remained for title and abstract review., Conclusions: The use of eHealth in weight management programs has increased significantly in recent years and will continue to do so; however, it is uncertain if eHealth weight management programs are effective in a low SES population. The results of this systematic review will therefore provide a summary of the evidence for interventions using eHealth for people living with overweight and obesity and from a low SES background., Trial Registration: PROSPERO International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews CRD42021243973; https://tinyurl.com/2p8fxtnw., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): DERR1-10.2196/34546., (©Richard Myers-Ingram, Jade Sampford, Rhian Milton-Cole, Gareth David Jones. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 20.01.2022.)
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- 2022
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28. The conundrum of depressive symptom-frailty comorbidity and overlap.
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Milton-Cole R and Stubbs B
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- Aged, Comorbidity, Depression diagnosis, Depression epidemiology, Frail Elderly, Humans, Frailty epidemiology
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- 2022
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29. Recovery, rehabilitation and follow-up services following critical illness: an updated UK national cross-sectional survey and progress report.
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Connolly B, Milton-Cole R, Adams C, Battle C, McPeake J, Quasim T, Silversides J, Slack A, Waldmann C, Wilson E, and Meyer J
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Pandemics, Research Report, SARS-CoV-2, United Kingdom, COVID-19, Critical Illness
- Abstract
Objective: To comprehensively update and survey the current provision of recovery, rehabilitation and follow-up services for adult critical care patients across the UK., Design: Cross-sectional, self-administered, predominantly closed-question, electronic, online survey., Setting: Institutions providing adult critical care services identified from national databases., Participants: Multiprofessional critical care clinicians delivering services at each site., Results: Responses from 176 UK hospital sites were included (176/242, 72.7%). Inpatient recovery and follow-up services were present at 127/176 (72.2%) sites, adopting multiple formats of delivery and primarily delivered by nurses (n=115/127, 90.6%). Outpatient services ran at 130 sites (73.9%), predominantly as outpatient clinics. Most services (n=108/130, 83.1%) were co-delivered by two or more healthcare professionals, typically nurse/intensive care unit (ICU) physician (n=29/130, 22.3%) or nurse/ICU physician/physiotherapist (n=19/130, 14.6%) teams. Clinical psychology was most frequently lacking from inpatient or outpatient services. Lack of funding was consistently the primary barrier to service provision, with other barriers including logistical and service prioritisation factors indicating that infrastructure and profile for services remain inadequate. Posthospital discharge physical rehabilitation programmes were relatively few (n=31/176, 17.6%), but peer support services were available in nearly half of responding institutions (n=85/176, 48.3%). The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in either increasing, decreasing or reformatting service provision. Future plans for long-term service transformation focus on expansion of current, and establishment of new, outpatient services., Conclusion: Overall, these data demonstrate a proliferation of recovery, follow-up and rehabilitation services for critically ill adults in the past decade across the UK, although service gaps remain suggesting further work is required for guideline implementation. Findings can be used to enhance survivorship for critically ill adults, inform policymakers and commissioners, and provide comparative data and experiential insights for clinicians designing models of care in international healthcare jurisdictions., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2021
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