reviewClinical RehabilitationMay 2, 2016Closed access

Real-time telerehabilitation for the treatment of musculoskeletal conditions is effective and comparable to standard practice: a systematic review and meta-analysis

The University of Queensland · Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

To evaluate the effectiveness of treatment delivered via real-time telerehabilitation for the management of musculoskeletal conditions, and to determine if real-time telerehabilitation is comparable to conventional methods of delivery within this population. Data sources: Six databases (Medline, Embase, Cochrane CENTRAL, PEDro, psycINFO, CINAHL) were searched from inception to November 2015 for literature which reported on the outcomes of real-time telerehabilitation for musculoskeletal conditions. Review methods: Two reviewers screened 5913 abstracts where 13 studies ( n = 1520) met the eligibility criteria. Methodological quality was assessed using the Downs & Black ‘Checklist for Measuring Quality’ tool. Results were pooled for meta-analysis based upon primary outcome measures and reported as standardised mean differences and 95% confidence intervals (CI).

Results

Aggregate results suggest that telerehabilitation is effective in the improvement of physical function (SMD 1.63, 95%CI 0.92-2.33, I 2 =93%), whilst being slightly more favourable (SMD 0.44, 95%CI 0.19-0.69, I 2 =58%) than the control cohort following intervention. Sub-group analyses reveals that telerehabilitation in addition to usual care is more favourable (SMD 0.64, 95%CI 0.43-0.85, I 2 =10%) than usual care alone, whilst treatment delivered solely via telerehabilitation is equivalent to face-to-face intervention (SMD MD 0.14, 95% CI −0.10–0.37, I 2 = 0%) for the improvement of physical function. The improvement of pain was also seen to be comparable between cohorts (SMD 0.66, 95%CI −0.27–1.60, I 2 =96%) following intervention.

Citation impact

684
total citations
FWCI
13.26
Percentile
100%
References
53
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Telerehabilitation
  • Medicine
  • Physical therapy
  • Meta-analysis
  • CINAHL
  • PsycINFO
  • MEDLINE
  • Randomized controlled trial
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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