Long-term telerehabilitation of COPD patients in their homes: Interim results from a pilot study in Northern Norway

We investigated the feasibility of a long-term telerehabilitation service for COPD patients comprising exercise training at home, telemonitoring and education/self-management. The service was offered as a 2-year follow-up programme by a physiotherapist. Equipment included a treadmill, a pulse oximet...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare
Main Authors: Zanaboni, Paolo, Lien, Linda Aareen, Hjalmarsen, Audhild, Wootton, Richard
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Sage Publications Ltd. 2013
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Online Access:https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:330161
Description
Summary:We investigated the feasibility of a long-term telerehabilitation service for COPD patients comprising exercise training at home, telemonitoring and education/self-management. The service was offered as a 2-year follow-up programme by a physiotherapist. Equipment included a treadmill, a pulse oximeter and a tablet computer. Participants had weekly videoconference sessions with the physiotherapist. A website was used to access a training programme and to fill in a daily diary and a training diary. Ten patients with moderate or severe COPD participated in a pilot study in Northern Norway. After more than one year, all participants were still participating actively and no drop-outs had occurred. On average, there were 2.0 training sessions/week, 3.3 measurements/week registered via the website and 0.5 videoconference contacts/week. There was a reduction of 27% in the COPD-related hospital costs. Feedback from the participants was very positive. Long-term telerehabilitation of COPD patients at home is feasible and interim results suggest that it reduces healthcare utilization.