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    Mixed-methods non-randomised single-arm feasibility study assessing delivery of a remote vocational rehabilitation intervention for patients with serious injury : the ROWTATE study

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    Author
    Kellezi, Blerina
    Holmes, Jain
    Kettlewell, Jade
    Lindley, Rebecca
    Radford, Kate
    Patel, Priya
    Bridger, Kay
    Lannin, Natasha A
    Andrews, Isobel
    Blackburn, Lauren
    Brooks, Adam
    das Nair, Roshan
    Fallon, Steve
    Farrin, Amanda
    Hoffman, K
    Jones, Trevor
    Morriss, Richard
    Timmons, Stephen
    Kendrick, Denise
    Show allShow less
    Keyword
    Vocational rehabilitation
    Wounds and injuries
    Occupational therapy
    Date
    2025
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1136/bmjopen-2025-104518
    Publisher's URL
    https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/bmjopen/15/11/e104518.full.pdf
    Abstract
    Objectives This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of delivering a vocational rehabilitation intervention (Return to Work After Trauma—ROWTATE), remotely to individuals recovering from traumatic injuries. The primary objectives were to assess therapists’ training and competence, adapt the intervention and training for remote delivery and assess the feasibility and fidelity of remote delivery to inform a definitive randomised controlled trial.Design A mixed-methods feasibility study incorporating (1) telerehabilitation qualitative literature review, (2) qualitative interviews preintervention and postintervention with therapists and patients, (3) a team objective structured clinical examination to assess competency, (4) usefulness of training, attitudes towards (15-item Evidence-Based Practice Attitude Scale) and confidence in (4-item Evidence Based Practice Confidence Scale) evidence-based practice, intervention delivery confidence (8-bespoke questions) and intervention behaviour determinants (51-items Theoretical Domains Framework) and (5) single-arm intervention delivery feasibility study.Setting The study was conducted in two UK Major Trauma Centres. The intervention and training were adapted for remote delivery due to the COVID-19 pandemic.Participants Therapists: Seven occupational therapists (OTs) and clinical psychologists (CPs) were trained, and six participated in competency assessment. Seven OTs and CPs participated in preintervention interviews and surveys; six completed post-intervention interviews and four completed post-training surveys. Patients: 10 patients were enrolled in the single-arm feasibility study and 4 of these participated in postintervention qualitative interviews. Inclusion criteria included therapists involved in vocational rehabilitation delivery and patients admitted to major trauma centres. Exclusion criteria included participation in other vocational rehabilitation trials or those who had returned to work or education for at least 80% of preinjury hours. Intervention: The ROWTATE vocational rehabilitation intervention was delivered remotely by trained OTs and CPs. Training included competency assessments, mentoring and adaptation for telerehabilitation. The intervention was delivered over multiple sessions, with content tailored to individual patient needs.Results Therapists found the training useful, reported positive attitudes (Evidence-Based Practice Attitude Scale mean=2.9 (SD 0.9)) and high levels of confidence in delivering evidence-based practice (range 75%–100%) and the ROWTATE intervention (range 80%–100%). Intervention barriers identified pretraining became facilitators post-training. Half the therapists needed additional support post-training through mentoring or additional training. The intervention and training were successfully adapted for remote delivery. High levels of fidelity (intervention components delivered: OTs=84.5%, CPs=92.9%) and session attendance rates were found (median: OT=97%, CP=100%). Virtually all sessions were delivered remotely (OT=98%, CP=100%). The intervention was acceptable to patients and therapists; both considered face-to-face delivery where necessary was important.Conclusions The ROWTATE intervention was delivered remotely with high fidelity and attendance and was acceptable to patients and therapists. Definitive trial key changes include modifying therapist training, competency assessment, face-to-face intervention delivery where necessary and addressing lower fidelity intervention components.Trial registration number ISRCTN74668529.Data are available on reasonable request. The data that participants have consented to share will become available to potential researchers at the end of the ROWTATE research programme. Requests detailing the research aims and use of the data should be sent to the research team via email: ROWTATE@nottingham.ac.uk.
    Citation
    Kellezi, B., Holmes, J., Kettlewell, J., Lindley, R., Radford, K., Patel, P., Bridger, K., Lannin, N. A., Andrews, I., Blackburn, L., et al. (2025). Mixed-methods non-randomised single-arm feasibility study assessing delivery of a remote vocational rehabilitation intervention for patients with serious injury : the ROWTATE study. BMJ Open, 15 (11), pp.e104518.
    Publisher
    BMJ Group
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/20077
    Note
    © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ Group
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    NottsHC Injuries, Accidents and Wounds

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