AI Article Synopsis

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted everyone's physical and mental health, prompting new research supporting physiotherapy as a key management strategy for patients.
  • A literature review analyzed studies from databases like PubMed and The Cochrane Database, focusing on physiotherapy interventions for COVID-19 recovery, and filtered through strict criteria to find relevant articles.
  • The findings suggest that physiotherapy not only aids recovery in COVID-19 patients but also helps reduce their length of stay in intensive care and overall treatment costs, highlighting its importance amid the economic challenges posed by the pandemic.

Article Abstract

Background: The current COVID-19 pandemic has changed the entire world population's physical and mental wellbeing irrespective of the person being infected or not. Flourishing numbers of new research recommends physiotherapy for the management of COVID-19 patients. However, there are cavities in the study in the recommendation of physiotherapy specific to the current pandemic.

Objective: This review aimed to synthesize physiotherapy-related articles to COVID-19 and summarize their efficacious highlights.

Methods: For the literature search PubMed, PEDro, DOAJ and The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews were used. The keywords included "Physiotherapy", "COVID-19", and "Coronavirus". The Boolean search was applied as required. Selection criteria included studies that included physiotherapy intervention as a tool for recovery of COVID-19. Exclusion criteria included animal studies, non-COVID-19 studies and physiotherapy as an adjunct treatment. The study evaluated evidence of all full-text articles in English from December 2019 to August 2020.

Results: Of the retrieved 577 articles, 390 articles were excluded at the title and abstract screening. 167 articles underwent full-text screening and further narrowed to 11 studies matching the expected criteria. 156 studies were excluded for various reasons.

Conclusion: The current study findings support that physiotherapy interventions facilitate recovery in COVID-19 patients and act as a protective barrier. Further results include a reduced length of stay in intensive care and reduced treatment cost since this outbreak has brought a significant economic burden to many countries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/WOR-210450DOI Listing

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