Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3453030 Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Kirby RL, Mifflen NJ, Thibault DL, Smith C, Best KL, Thompson KJ, MacLeod DA. The manual wheelchair-handling skills of caregivers and the effect of training.ObjectiveTo test the hypothesis that the Wheelchair Skills Training Program (WSTP) is effective in improving the wheelchair-handling skills of untrained caregivers.DesignWithin-participant comparisons.SettingRehabilitation center and community.ParticipantsTwenty-four caregivers of manual wheelchair users.InterventionsCaregiver participants underwent the WSTP, version 2.4, adapted for caregivers. Training was individualized on the basis of an integrated testing-and-training protocol that took place on a single occasion (total, ≈50min).Main outcome measuresTotal percentage scores on the objective Wheelchair Skills Test (WST), version 2.4, for the pretraining (N=24), posttraining (N=24), and retention (n=9) evaluations. For the skill-transfer evaluation (n=10), we used the questionnaire version (WST-Q), administered by telephone to participants after return to their communities.ResultsThere were no serious adverse incidents. The mean pretraining total WST score ± standard deviation was 77.8%±12.0%. Posttraining, this increased to 94.7%±7.1% (P<.001), a 22% relative increase. At retention testing, a median latency of 7 days later, the mean value, 94.2%±7.1%, did not decrease significantly from the posttraining level (P=.38). At skill-transfer testing, a median latency of 179 days posttraining, the mean value, 92.5%±8.7%, did not decrease significantly from the posttraining level (P=.73). The greatest improvements were at the advanced skill level.ConclusionsThe WSTP is a safe, practical, and effective method of improving the wheelchair-handling skills of untrained caregivers. Skill improvements are generally well retained and transfer well to the community. Such training could play an important role in the rehabilitation process.

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