AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to determine if powered wheelchair users improve their skills through the Wheelchair Skills Training Program (WSTP) compared to a control group receiving standard care.
  • Participants (116 powered wheelchair users) were involved in a randomized controlled trial, undergoing five 30-minute training sessions.
  • Results showed a significant improvement in performance scores for the WSTP group immediately after training, high goal achievement, and satisfaction, but these benefits were not retained three months later, and there were no notable differences in injury rates or overall confidence.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To test the hypothesis that powered wheelchair users who receive the Wheelchair Skills Training Program (WSTP) improve their wheelchair skills in comparison with a control group that receives standard care, and secondarily to assess goal achievement, satisfaction with training, retention, injury rate, confidence with wheelchair use, and participation.

Design: Randomized controlled trial.

Setting: Rehabilitation centers and communities.

Participants: Powered wheelchair users (N=116).

Intervention: Five 30-minute WSTP training sessions.

Main Outcome Measures: Assessments were done at baseline (t1), posttraining (t2), and 3 months posttraining (t3) using the Wheelchair Skills Test Questionnaire (WST-Q version 4.1), Goal Attainment Score (GAS), Satisfaction Questionnaire, injury rate, Wheelchair Use Confidence Scale for Power Wheelchair Users (WheelCon), and Life Space Assessment (LSA).

Results: There was no significant t2-t1 difference between the groups for WST-Q capacity scores (P=.600), but the difference for WST-Q performance scores was significant (P=.016) with a relative (t2/t1 × 100%) improvement of the median score for the intervention group of 10.8%. The mean GAS ± SD for the intervention group after training was 92.8%±11.4%, and satisfaction with training was high. The WST-Q gain was not retained at t3. There was no clinically significant difference between the groups in injury rate and no statistically significant differences in WheelCon or LSA scores at t3.

Conclusions: Powered wheelchair users who receive formal wheelchair skills training demonstrate modest, transient posttraining improvements in their WST-Q performance scores, have substantial improvements on individualized goals, and are positive about training.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4674291PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apmr.2015.07.009DOI Listing

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