Coordinated speech therapy, physiotherapy, and pharmaceutical care telehealth for people with Parkinson disease in rural communities: an exploratory, 8-week cohort study for feasibility, safety, and signal of efficacy

Mary Jo Cooley Hidecker, Merrill R. Landers, Annalisa Piccorelli, Erin Bush, Reshmi Singh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: The potential for coordinated, multidisciplinary telehealth to help connect people with Parkinson disease (PD) in rural areas to PD specialists is crucial in optimizing care. Therefore, this study aimed to test the feasibility, safety, and signal of efficacy of a coordinated telehealth program, consisting of speech therapy, physiotherapy, and pharmaceutical care, for people with PD living in some rural US communities. Methods: Fifteen individuals with PD living in rural Wyoming and Nevada, USA, participated in this single-cohort, 8-week pilot study. Participants were assessed before and after 8 weeks of coordinated, one-on-one telehealth using the following outcomes: (1) feasibility: session attendance and withdrawal rate; (2) safety: adverse events; and (3) signal of efficacy: Communication Effectiveness Survey, acoustic data (intensity, duration, work (intensity times duration)), Parkinson’s Fatigue Scale, 30 second Sit-to-Stand test, Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire – 39, Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale – Part III, and medication adherence. Results: Average attendance was greater than 85% for all participants. There were no serious adverse events and only nine minor events during treatment sessions (0.9% of all treatment sessions had a participant report of an adverse event); all nine cases resolved without medical attention. Although 14 of 16 outcomes had effect sizes trending in the direction of improvement, only two were statistically significant using non-parametric analyses: 30 second Sit-to-Stand (pre-test median=11.0 (interquartile range (IQR)=6.0); post-test median=12.0 (IQR=3.0) and acoustic data work (pre-test median=756.0 dB s (IQR=198.4); post-test median=876.3 dB s (IQR=455.5), p<0.05. Conclusion: A coordinated, multidisciplinary telehealth program was safe and feasible for people in rural communities who have PD.

Original languageEnglish
Article number6679
JournalRural and Remote Health
Volume22
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022,Rural and Remote Health.All Rights Reserved

Keywords

  • Exercise
  • Management
  • Medication
  • Physiotherapy
  • Speech and communication disorder
  • Telerehabilitation
  • Usa

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Coordinated speech therapy, physiotherapy, and pharmaceutical care telehealth for people with Parkinson disease in rural communities: an exploratory, 8-week cohort study for feasibility, safety, and signal of efficacy'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this