Litcius/Paper detail

Digital rehabilitation for hand and wrist pain: a single-arm prospective longitudinal cohort study

Fabíola Costa, Dora Janela, Maria Molinos, Robert Moulder, Jorge Laíns, Gerard E. Francisco, Virgílio Bento, Vijay Yanamadala, Steven P. Cohen, Fernando Dias Correia

2022PAIN Reports16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Introduction: Wrist and hand represent the third most common body part in work-related injuries, being associated with long-term absenteeism. Telerehabilitation can promote access to treatment, patient adherence, and engagement, while reducing health care-related costs. Objective: Report the results of a fully remote digital care program (DCP) for wrist and hand pain (WP). Methods: A single-arm interventional study was conducted on individuals with WP applying for a DCP. Primary outcome was the mean change in the Numerical Pain Rating Scale after 8 weeks (considering a minimum clinically important change of 30%). Secondary outcomes were: disability (Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand questionnaire), analgesic intake, surgery intention, mental health (patient health questionnaire [PHQ-9] and generalized anxiety disorder [GAD-7]), fear-avoidance beliefs (FABQ-PA), work productivity and activity impairment, and engagement. Results: From 189 individuals starting the DCP, 149 (78.8%) completed the intervention. A significant pain improvement was observed (51.3% reduction (2.26, 95% CI 1.73; 2.78)) and 70.4% of participants surpassing minimum clinically important change. This change correlated with improvements in disability (52.1%), FABQ-PA (32.2%), and activities impairment recovery (65.4%). Improvements were also observed in other domains: surgery intent (76.1%), mental health (67.0% in anxiety and 72.7% in depression), and overall productivity losses (68.2%). Analgesic intake decreased from 22.5% to 7.1%. Mean patient satisfaction score was 8.5/10.0 (SD 1.8). Conclusions: These findings support the feasibility and utility of a fully remote DCP for patients with WP. Clinically significant improvements were observed in all health-related and productivity-related outcomes, alongside very high patient adherence rates and satisfaction. This study strengthens that management of WP is possible through a remote DCP, decreasing access barriers and potentially easing health care expenditure.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePhysical therapyAnxietyDepression (economics)AbsenteeismPatient Health QuestionnaireRehabilitationTelerehabilitationMental healthWristWrist painPhysical medicine and rehabilitationTelemedicineHealth carePsychologyPsychiatrySurgeryDepressive symptomsMacroeconomicsEconomicsEconomic growthSocial psychologyPain Management and TreatmentMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationTelemedicine and Telehealth Implementation