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Understanding the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on delivery of rehabilitation in specialist palliative care services: An analysis of the CovPall-Rehab survey data

Bayly, Joanne; Bradshaw, Andy; Fettes, Lucy; Omarjee, Muhammed; Talbot-Rice, Helena; Walshe, Catherine; Sleeman, Katherine E.; Bajwah, Sabrina; Dunleavy, Lesley; Hocaoglu, Mevhibe; Oluyase, Adejoke; Garner, Ian; Cripps, Rachel L.; Preston, Nancy; Fraser, Lorna K.; Murtagh, Fliss E.M.; Higginson, Irene J.; Maddocks, Matthew

Authors

Joanne Bayly

Andy Bradshaw

Lucy Fettes

Muhammed Omarjee

Helena Talbot-Rice

Catherine Walshe

Katherine E. Sleeman

Sabrina Bajwah

Lesley Dunleavy

Mevhibe Hocaoglu

Adejoke Oluyase

Ian Garner

Rachel L. Cripps

Nancy Preston

Lorna K. Fraser

Irene J. Higginson

Matthew Maddocks



Abstract

Background: Palliative rehabilitation involves multi-professional processes and interventions aimed at optimising patients’ symptom self-management, independence and social participation throughout advanced illness. Rehabilitation services were highly disrupted during the Covid-19 pandemic. Aim: To understand rehabilitation provision in palliative care services during the Covid-19 pandemic, identifying and reflecting on adaptative and innovative practice to inform ongoing provision. Design: Cross-sectional national online survey. Setting/participants: Rehabilitation leads for specialist palliative care services across hospice, hospital, or community settings, conducted from 30/07/20 to 21/09/2020. Findings: 61 completed responses (England, n = 55; Scotland, n = 4; Wales, n = 1; and Northern Ireland, n = 1) most frequently from services based in hospices (56/61, 92%) providing adult rehabilitation. Most services (55/61, 90%) reported rehabilitation provision becoming remote during Covid-19 and half reported reduced caseloads. Rehabilitation teams frequently had staff members on sick-leave with suspected/confirmed Covid-19 (27/61, 44%), redeployed to other services/organisations (25/61, 41%) or furloughed (15/61, 26%). Free text responses were constructed into four themes: (i) fluctuating shared spaces; (ii) remote and digitised rehabilitation offer; (iii) capacity to provide and participate in rehabilitation; (iv) Covid-19 as a springboard for positive change. These represent how rehabilitation services contracted, reconfigured, and were redirected to more remote modes of delivery, and how this affected the capacity of clinicians and patients to participate in rehabilitation. Conclusion: This study demonstrates how changes in provision of rehabilitation during the pandemic could act as a springboard for positive changes. Hybrid models of rehabilitation have the potential to expand the equity of access and reach of rehabilitation within specialist palliative care.

Citation

Bayly, J., Bradshaw, A., Fettes, L., Omarjee, M., Talbot-Rice, H., Walshe, C., Sleeman, K. E., Bajwah, S., Dunleavy, L., Hocaoglu, M., Oluyase, A., Garner, I., Cripps, R. L., Preston, N., Fraser, L. K., Murtagh, F. E., Higginson, I. J., & Maddocks, M. (in press). Understanding the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on delivery of rehabilitation in specialist palliative care services: An analysis of the CovPall-Rehab survey data. Palliative medicine, https://doi.org/10.1177/02692163211063397

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 30, 2021
Online Publication Date Dec 29, 2021
Deposit Date Jan 11, 2022
Publicly Available Date Jan 12, 2022
Journal Palliative Medicine
Print ISSN 0269-2163
Electronic ISSN 1477-030X
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/02692163211063397
Keywords Rehabilitation; Palliative care; Hospices; Physical therapy modalities; Occupational therapy; Surveys and questionnaires; Covid-19
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3909985

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Copyright Statement
© The Author(s) 2021.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage)





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