AI Article Synopsis

  • Inpatient rehabilitation improves health-related quality of life (HRQOL) for multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, but the benefits often lessen after returning home, prompting a study on monthly telecoaching to sustain improvements.
  • A one-year study compared two telecoaching methods (telephone and web-based) to see if they could help maintain HRQOL post-discharge, using a neuropsychological group and a physical group for analysis.
  • Results showed that the neuropsychological group experienced long-term HRQOL benefits from telecoaching, particularly with one-on-one phone support, while the physical group did not see any significant improvement.

Article Abstract

Background: Inpatient rehabilitation improves health-related quality of life (HRQOL) for people with multiple sclerosis (MS). However, the obtained improvements decline once people return home. The challenge is to find ways to preserve the beneficial effects for the long term. We investigated whether monthly telecoaching after discharge would enhance the long-term carryover of improvements.

Methods: We conducted a 1-year exploratory study with 2 delivery methods: telephone coaching and web-based coaching. After discharge, the telephone group received monthly calls; the web-based group responded to monthly online coaching questions. Based on their rehabilitation goals, we put patients into a neuropsychological group or a physical group. In addition, we matched each patient with similar wait-list control patients and treatment patients from the main study. The primary outcome was HRQOL measured by the Functional Assessment in Multiple Sclerosis (FAMS).

Results: The neuropsychological group had long-term preservation of HRQOL with both delivery methods, with telephone coaching seeming to be superior. Mean differences in FAMS at the 12-month median follow-up for the neuropsychological group compared with the control wait-list control group were for the telephone group: + 15.4 (95% CI, 3.5-27.4; P = .011); for the web-based group: + 10.9 (95% CI, -3.3 to 25.2; P = .130); for the control treatment group: + 6.9 (95% CI, 0.6-13.3; P = .031). The physical group saw no beneficial effects from telecoaching.

Conclusions: Following inpatient multidisciplinary rehabilitation, monthly telecoaching of individuals with MS with neuropsychological challenges enhanced the long-term carryover of HRQOL, with one-on-one telephone coaching showing more pronounced improvements than web-based automated coaching.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11440362PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7224/1537-2073.2023-038DOI Listing

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