Rehabilitation in Primary Health Care for the ageing population: A secondary analysis from a scoping review of rehabilitation models for the ageing population

Author:

Seijas Vanessa1,Roxanne Maritz2,Mishra Satish3,Bernard Renaldo M4,Fernandes Patricia5,Lorenz Viola1,Machado Barbara1,Posada Ana María6,Lugo Luz Helena6,Bickenbach Jerome4,Sabariego Carla1

Affiliation:

1. University of Lucerne

2. WHO Collaborating Centre for Rehabilitation in Health Systems

3. World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe

4. Swiss Paraplegic Research

5. Federal University of Parana

6. University of Antioquia

Abstract

Abstract Background: The world population is ageing rapidly. Rehabilitation is one of the most effective health strategies for improving the health and functioning of older persons. An understanding of the current provision of rehabilitation services in primary health care (PHC) is needed to optimise access to rehabilitation for the ageing population. The objectives of this scoping review are a) to describe how rehabilitation services are currently offered in PHC to the ageing population, and b) to explore age-related differences in the type of rehabilitation services provided. Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of a scoping review examining rehabilitation models for older persons, with a focus on PHC. Medline and Embase (2015-2022) were searched to identify studies published in English on rehabilitation services for people aged 50+. Two authors independently screened records and extracted data using the World Health Organization (WHO)'s operational framework, the PHC systems (PRIMASYS) approach and the WHO paper on rehabilitation in PHC. Data synthesis included quantitative and qualitative analysis. Results: We synthesised data from 96 studies with 31,956 participants and identified five models for rehabilitation in PHC for the ageing population: community, home, telerehabilitation, outpatient and eldercare. Nurses, physiotherapists, and occupational therapists were the most common providers, with task-shifting reported in 15.6% of studies. The most common interventions were assessment of functioning, rehabilitation coordination, therapeutic exercise, psychological interventions, and self-management education. Environmental adaptations and assistive technology were rarely reported. Conclusions: By understanding models of rehabilitation service delivery in PHC, stakeholders can work towards developing more comprehensive and accessible services that meet the diverse needs of the ageing population, considering multimorbidity, evidence of heterogeneity in the ageing process, and the importance of using limitations in functioning as a starting point. Our findings, highlight rehabilitation's role in healthy ageing and are a valuable resource for informing policy, practice, and future research in the context of the United Nations Decade of Healthy Ageing. They can also inform WHO's ongoing efforts to strengthen PHC for the provision of rehabilitation, as recommended by the Rehab2030 initiative and reaffirmed by the recently adopted World Health Assembly (WHA) resolution on strengthening rehabilitation in health systems.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference79 articles.

1. World Healt Organization. Ageing and health [Available from: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/ageing-and-health.

2. Decade of Healthy Ageing Baseline Report [Internet]. 2020 [cited Accessed 22 September 2022]. Available from: https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240017900.

3. United Nations, World Healt Organization. Decade of healthy ageing 2021–2030 2021 [Available from: https://www.who.int/initiatives/decade-of-healthy-ageing.

4. Local public health system performance and community health outcomes;Ingram RC;Am J Prev Med,2012

5. The impact of primary care: a focused review;Shi L;Scientifica (Cairo),2012

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