Physiotherapy use and access-barriers in persons with multiple sclerosis: A cross-sectional analysis

•Physiotherapy (PT) may alleviate multiple sclerosis symptoms, yet little is known about usage and barriers.•PT usage was studied based on self-reports of 1493 Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry participants.•PT usage was higher in persons with primary-progressive MS, higher symptom burden, or recent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Multiple sclerosis and related disorders 2021-02, Vol.48, p.102710-102710, Article 102710
Hauptverfasser: Fortunato, Remo, van der Maas, Nico Arie, Biland-Thommen, Ursula, Kaufmann, Marco, Sieber, Chloé, Kamm, Christian P, Zecca, Chiara, Gobbi, Claudio, Chan, Andrew, Calabrese, Pasquale, Kesselring, Jürg, von Wyl, Viktor
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container_title Multiple sclerosis and related disorders
container_volume 48
creator Fortunato, Remo
van der Maas, Nico Arie
Biland-Thommen, Ursula
Kaufmann, Marco
Sieber, Chloé
Kamm, Christian P
Zecca, Chiara
Gobbi, Claudio
Chan, Andrew
Calabrese, Pasquale
Kesselring, Jürg
von Wyl, Viktor
description •Physiotherapy (PT) may alleviate multiple sclerosis symptoms, yet little is known about usage and barriers.•PT usage was studied based on self-reports of 1493 Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry participants.•PT usage was higher in persons with primary-progressive MS, higher symptom burden, or recent stays at a rehabilitation clinic.•No association between PT supply and percent PT users per Swiss canton was detected.•PT uptake differences were observed by language region, which warrant further investigations. Physiotherapy may alleviate many multiple sclerosis (MS) symptoms, yet very little is known about physiotherapy accessibility and possible barriers in persons with MS (pwMS). We therefore aimed to elucidate physiotherapy use and possible access-barriers using data from 1493 pwMS from the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry (SMSR), a patient-centered, longitudinal, observational MS study. We used data of the SMSR to investigate the question at hand in a multivariable logistic regression model with regularly receiving physiotherapy (yes/no) as the outcome. Potential explanatory variables were investigated following an AIC-driven model selection approach and consisted of a priori specified socio-demographic variables, health status, and personal or social mobility variables. As a last step, the impact of physiotherapist supply on regular use was assessed in the final model. Missing data were handled by multiple imputation (main analysis), and complete case sensitivity analyses were performed. The main analysis included 1493 participants. In the multivariable logistic regression, positive associations were found between the use of physiotherapy and the following variables: having a primary-progressive MS (Odds Ratio (OR) [95% Confidence Intervals] 1.97 [1.18; 3.29]), being more severely impaired (EDSS 4-6.5 OR 1.84 [1.16; 2.91]), higher number of current symptoms (1 OR 3.31 [1.63; 6.74], 2-3 OR 3.43 [1.8; 6.53], 4-5 OR 4.44 [2.28; 8.66], 6-7 OR 4.06 [1.90; 8.70], 8-9 OR 3.87 [1.71; 8.75], being on disability pension (OR 1.75 [1.24; 2.46], or having applied for it OR 2.25 [1.31; 3.85]), having gait problems (OR 1.58 [1.11; 2.23]), having been in a rehabilitation clinic in the past 12 months (OR 4.43 [2.17; 9.03]), and currently being on disease-modifying treatment (OR 1.61 [1.12; 2.31]). Negative associations were found for a higher quality of life (OR 0.92 [0.85; 0.98]), working more than 80% (OR 0.47 [0.30; 0.75]) and being from the French language region (
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Physiotherapy may alleviate many multiple sclerosis (MS) symptoms, yet very little is known about physiotherapy accessibility and possible barriers in persons with MS (pwMS). We therefore aimed to elucidate physiotherapy use and possible access-barriers using data from 1493 pwMS from the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry (SMSR), a patient-centered, longitudinal, observational MS study. We used data of the SMSR to investigate the question at hand in a multivariable logistic regression model with regularly receiving physiotherapy (yes/no) as the outcome. Potential explanatory variables were investigated following an AIC-driven model selection approach and consisted of a priori specified socio-demographic variables, health status, and personal or social mobility variables. As a last step, the impact of physiotherapist supply on regular use was assessed in the final model. Missing data were handled by multiple imputation (main analysis), and complete case sensitivity analyses were performed. The main analysis included 1493 participants. In the multivariable logistic regression, positive associations were found between the use of physiotherapy and the following variables: having a primary-progressive MS (Odds Ratio (OR) [95% Confidence Intervals] 1.97 [1.18; 3.29]), being more severely impaired (EDSS 4-6.5 OR 1.84 [1.16; 2.91]), higher number of current symptoms (1 OR 3.31 [1.63; 6.74], 2-3 OR 3.43 [1.8; 6.53], 4-5 OR 4.44 [2.28; 8.66], 6-7 OR 4.06 [1.90; 8.70], 8-9 OR 3.87 [1.71; 8.75], being on disability pension (OR 1.75 [1.24; 2.46], or having applied for it OR 2.25 [1.31; 3.85]), having gait problems (OR 1.58 [1.11; 2.23]), having been in a rehabilitation clinic in the past 12 months (OR 4.43 [2.17; 9.03]), and currently being on disease-modifying treatment (OR 1.61 [1.12; 2.31]). Negative associations were found for a higher quality of life (OR 0.92 [0.85; 0.98]), working more than 80% (OR 0.47 [0.30; 0.75]) and being from the French language region (OR 0.66 [0.47; 0.94]). No association between physiotherapist supply and regular physiotherapy use was detected. In a large, Swiss-based MS population, little evidence for socio-demographic barriers to physical therapy was found. Physiotherapy uptake was higher among pwMS with more impairments, lower health-related quality of life, or who have been discharged recently from inpatient rehabilitation. The uptake differences by language region warrant further investigations.</description><identifier>ISSN: 2211-0348</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 2211-0356</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1016/j.msard.2020.102710</identifier><identifier>PMID: 33370648</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Netherlands: Elsevier B.V</publisher><subject>Cross-Sectional Studies ; Humans ; Multiple Sclerosis - epidemiology ; Multiple Sclerosis - therapy ; Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive ; Physical Therapy Modalities ; Quality of Life</subject><ispartof>Multiple sclerosis and related disorders, 2021-02, Vol.48, p.102710-102710, Article 102710</ispartof><rights>2020</rights><rights>Copyright © 2020. 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Physiotherapy may alleviate many multiple sclerosis (MS) symptoms, yet very little is known about physiotherapy accessibility and possible barriers in persons with MS (pwMS). We therefore aimed to elucidate physiotherapy use and possible access-barriers using data from 1493 pwMS from the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry (SMSR), a patient-centered, longitudinal, observational MS study. We used data of the SMSR to investigate the question at hand in a multivariable logistic regression model with regularly receiving physiotherapy (yes/no) as the outcome. Potential explanatory variables were investigated following an AIC-driven model selection approach and consisted of a priori specified socio-demographic variables, health status, and personal or social mobility variables. As a last step, the impact of physiotherapist supply on regular use was assessed in the final model. Missing data were handled by multiple imputation (main analysis), and complete case sensitivity analyses were performed. The main analysis included 1493 participants. In the multivariable logistic regression, positive associations were found between the use of physiotherapy and the following variables: having a primary-progressive MS (Odds Ratio (OR) [95% Confidence Intervals] 1.97 [1.18; 3.29]), being more severely impaired (EDSS 4-6.5 OR 1.84 [1.16; 2.91]), higher number of current symptoms (1 OR 3.31 [1.63; 6.74], 2-3 OR 3.43 [1.8; 6.53], 4-5 OR 4.44 [2.28; 8.66], 6-7 OR 4.06 [1.90; 8.70], 8-9 OR 3.87 [1.71; 8.75], being on disability pension (OR 1.75 [1.24; 2.46], or having applied for it OR 2.25 [1.31; 3.85]), having gait problems (OR 1.58 [1.11; 2.23]), having been in a rehabilitation clinic in the past 12 months (OR 4.43 [2.17; 9.03]), and currently being on disease-modifying treatment (OR 1.61 [1.12; 2.31]). Negative associations were found for a higher quality of life (OR 0.92 [0.85; 0.98]), working more than 80% (OR 0.47 [0.30; 0.75]) and being from the French language region (OR 0.66 [0.47; 0.94]). No association between physiotherapist supply and regular physiotherapy use was detected. In a large, Swiss-based MS population, little evidence for socio-demographic barriers to physical therapy was found. Physiotherapy uptake was higher among pwMS with more impairments, lower health-related quality of life, or who have been discharged recently from inpatient rehabilitation. The uptake differences by language region warrant further investigations.</description><subject>Cross-Sectional Studies</subject><subject>Humans</subject><subject>Multiple Sclerosis - epidemiology</subject><subject>Multiple Sclerosis - therapy</subject><subject>Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive</subject><subject>Physical Therapy Modalities</subject><subject>Quality of Life</subject><issn>2211-0348</issn><issn>2211-0356</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2021</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>EIF</sourceid><recordid>eNp9kE1LAzEQhoMoVrS_QJAcvWzNx27SFTwU8QsKetBzyGZnacp-mdlV-u9NW-3RXGYIz7yTPIRccjbjjKub9axBG8qZYGJ7IzRnR-RMCM4TJjN1fOjT-YRMEdcsHpXxVPFTMpFSaqbS-Rkp31Yb9N2wgmD7DR0RqG1Lap0DxKSwIXgISH1L-1i7Fum3H1a0GevB9zVQdDWEDj3e0gV1scMEwQ2-a20dk2wd0_GCnFS2Rpj-1nPy8fjwfv-cLF-fXu4Xy8SlLB2SouIgcpllcydyEErnBVNFmVU5WO5YUTEhnNOFKLlWRapzpyJptea2kmCZPCfX-9w-dJ8j4GAajw7q2rbQjWhEqqVOeSZ1ROUe3b05QGX64BsbNoYzszVs1mZn2GwNm73hOHX1u2AsGigPM38-I3C3ByB-8yuqM-g8tA5KH6IWU3b-3wU_KTGOqw</recordid><startdate>202102</startdate><enddate>202102</enddate><creator>Fortunato, Remo</creator><creator>van der Maas, Nico Arie</creator><creator>Biland-Thommen, Ursula</creator><creator>Kaufmann, Marco</creator><creator>Sieber, Chloé</creator><creator>Kamm, Christian P</creator><creator>Zecca, Chiara</creator><creator>Gobbi, Claudio</creator><creator>Chan, Andrew</creator><creator>Calabrese, Pasquale</creator><creator>Kesselring, Jürg</creator><creator>von Wyl, Viktor</creator><general>Elsevier B.V</general><scope>6I.</scope><scope>AAFTH</scope><scope>CGR</scope><scope>CUY</scope><scope>CVF</scope><scope>ECM</scope><scope>EIF</scope><scope>NPM</scope><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>7X8</scope><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6642-5082</orcidid></search><sort><creationdate>202102</creationdate><title>Physiotherapy use and access-barriers in persons with multiple sclerosis: A cross-sectional analysis</title><author>Fortunato, Remo ; 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Physiotherapy may alleviate many multiple sclerosis (MS) symptoms, yet very little is known about physiotherapy accessibility and possible barriers in persons with MS (pwMS). We therefore aimed to elucidate physiotherapy use and possible access-barriers using data from 1493 pwMS from the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Registry (SMSR), a patient-centered, longitudinal, observational MS study. We used data of the SMSR to investigate the question at hand in a multivariable logistic regression model with regularly receiving physiotherapy (yes/no) as the outcome. Potential explanatory variables were investigated following an AIC-driven model selection approach and consisted of a priori specified socio-demographic variables, health status, and personal or social mobility variables. As a last step, the impact of physiotherapist supply on regular use was assessed in the final model. Missing data were handled by multiple imputation (main analysis), and complete case sensitivity analyses were performed. The main analysis included 1493 participants. In the multivariable logistic regression, positive associations were found between the use of physiotherapy and the following variables: having a primary-progressive MS (Odds Ratio (OR) [95% Confidence Intervals] 1.97 [1.18; 3.29]), being more severely impaired (EDSS 4-6.5 OR 1.84 [1.16; 2.91]), higher number of current symptoms (1 OR 3.31 [1.63; 6.74], 2-3 OR 3.43 [1.8; 6.53], 4-5 OR 4.44 [2.28; 8.66], 6-7 OR 4.06 [1.90; 8.70], 8-9 OR 3.87 [1.71; 8.75], being on disability pension (OR 1.75 [1.24; 2.46], or having applied for it OR 2.25 [1.31; 3.85]), having gait problems (OR 1.58 [1.11; 2.23]), having been in a rehabilitation clinic in the past 12 months (OR 4.43 [2.17; 9.03]), and currently being on disease-modifying treatment (OR 1.61 [1.12; 2.31]). 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subjects Cross-Sectional Studies
Humans
Multiple Sclerosis - epidemiology
Multiple Sclerosis - therapy
Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive
Physical Therapy Modalities
Quality of Life
title Physiotherapy use and access-barriers in persons with multiple sclerosis: A cross-sectional analysis
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