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Rehabilitation Research During and after the COVID-19 Pandemic: Emergent Strategies From a Trainee-Faculty Workshop

Authors :
Ava Mehdipour
Laura V. Garcia Diaz
Lori Letts
Marla K. Beauchamp
Julie C. Reid
Julie Richardson
Kevin Moncion
Nora Bakaa
Cassandra D'Amore
Kenneth S. Noguchi
Ana Maria Ilicic
Anne Kumurenzi
Sandra Moll
Christopher Farley
Jill Van Damme
Elise Wiley
Brenda Vrkljan
Lisa C. Carlesso
Stephanie Saunders
Michelle E. Kho
Ze Lu
Erin Knobl
Linda Nguyen
Luciana G. Macedo
Source :
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Research Objectives 1) To identify challenges for conducting ongoing and future rehabilitation research during and after the COVID-19 pandemic, and 2) to develop strategies that can support ongoing and future rehabilitation research. Design A two-hour facilitated online workshop with guided discussion. Setting Online workshop synchronously recorded via Zoom. Participants Trainees (14 doctoral; 2 MSc students; 1 post-doctoral fellow) and research faculty (5 physiotherapy; 3 occupational therapy), School of Rehabilitation Science, McMaster University, Canada. Interventions Not applicable. Main Outcome Measures Workshop transcript and field notes were cross-compared by 4 workshop facilitators from which 3 main categories emerged: 1) pandemic protocol adjustment, 2) participant accessibility, and 3) knowledge dissemination. Results 1) Pandemic protocol adjustment: Workshop participants identified concerns with transitioning pre- to post-pandemic research, such as variations in intervention protocols and psychometric properties of virtually guided outcome assessments. Strategies identified: Delivering toolkits containing equipment needed for virtually guided assessments, and their comprehensive psychometric evaluation prior to use. 2) Participant accessibility: Virtually guided rehabilitation research may present barriers to participation for some populations due to a lack of internet access and proficiency. Strategies identified: Including community stakeholders in the decision-making process to help guide the development of safe and feasible study protocols, and simplifying protocols to maintain participants’ adherence. 3) Knowledge dissemination: Virtually delivered conferences have required additional preparation time due to requirements of pre-recorded presentations, and hinder important conversations between conference attendees. Strategies identified: Researchers should account for delays in knowledge translation plans for funding applications, and conference organizers should consider hosting networking events for attendees. Conclusions This workshop served as a catalyst for creative solutions to complex methodological challenges that can be integrated within existing and future rehabilitation-focused studies during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. Author(s) Disclosures None.

Details

ISSN :
00039993
Volume :
102
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4c57fd7b7b8a15a6bf3b6f402506f5de