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RecruitingNCT06399614

Occupational Therapy-led Services for Adults Presenting Acutely With a Hand Condition

An Evidenced Based Analytical Study of Occupational Therapy-led Services for Adults Presenting Acutely With a Hand Condition

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
150 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Limerick · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Traumatic hand injuries account for up to one third of acute hospital presentations. Current guidelines and standards of care recommend patients with hand trauma are seen by hand therapists, typically occupational therapists. The proposed study aims to explore the effectiveness of occupational therapy-led hand therapy services for the adult population presenting acutely to an injury unit or emergency department setting with a hand condition. The research project will consist of an analytical study, involving four different sites in Ireland to enrich findings, and to aid future service development. One site will be the comparison site, as it does not have access to occupational therapy, and will offer patients 'care as usual' upon attendance. Outcome measures will be used for all participants and will be completed at initial patient contact, at week eight and at six months. It is hoped the current proposed study will help shape future service development for those with hand injury including provision of evidence based occupational therapy assessment and intervention.

Detailed description

Traumatic hand injuries account for up to one third of acute hospital presentations. The establishment of Occupational Therapy-led hand therapy clinics is gaining momentum within the literature as improving hand trauma patient care and outcomes. It is identified within the literature that point of acute contact service areas such as accident and emergency or injury unit type settings could benefit from a hand therapy service. The benefits reported include: better patient outcomes, reduced waiting times, reduction of patient presentations to consultant led clinics, faster turnaround of patient care and discharge, reduction of patient complaints, improved patient satisfaction, and reduced costs to the health service. The proposed study aims to explore the effectiveness of occupational therapy-led hand therapy services for the adult population presenting acutely to an injury unit or emergency department setting with a hand condition. The research project will consist of an analytical study, involving four different sites in Ireland to enrich findings, and to aid future service development. One site will be the comparison site, as it does not have access to occupational therapy, and will offer patients 'care as usual' upon attendance. Outcome measures will be used for all participants and will be completed at initial patient contact, at week eight and at six months. Study objectives include: 1. To define the demographics and characteristics (including functional ability, pain level, and quality of life) of adult service users pre- and post-acute attendance with a hand condition. 2. To profile clinical and process outcomes after initial visit, at 8-week and 6-month follow-up for patients provided with care as usual and those with targeted hand therapy led assessments and interventions. 3. To explore any objective and subjective patient, organizational, and societal benefits of hands service provision. It is hoped the current proposed study will improve the quality, safety, timeliness and cost of care provided to adults who present to acute services with a hand condition. This information may help shape future service development for those with hand injury including provision of evidence based occupational therapy-led services.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHEROccupational Therapy-led Hand Therapy ServiceTypes of interventions provided by the therapist will include splinting, targeted exercises and activities, occupation-based intervention, edema management, scar management; desensitisation, functional tasks completion, and education. All interventions provided are within occupational therapists' scope of practice and are evidence based. Number of treatment sessions will be individualised to the patient and guided by stages of recovery.
OTHERCare as usualCare as usual group: Participants attending an emergency department of injury unit, do not have access to occupational therapy services and will undergo 'care as usual' in line with the services\' protocols and procedures. Care as usual involves standard nursing and medical care and may include: wound care, use of 'off the shelf' orthosis, education, and onward referral to other healthcare professionals.

Timeline

Start date
2024-01-11
Primary completion
2025-11-01
Completion
2025-11-01
First posted
2024-05-06
Last updated
2025-10-01

Locations

5 sites across 1 country: Ireland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06399614. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.