Telerehabilitation Trends in Australian Physiotherapy and an Exploration of Factors That Influence Use After COVID-19 Restrictions: Qualitative Content Analysis
Megan H Ross, Joshua Simmich, Belinda J Lawford, Kim L Bennell, Rana S Hinman, Trevor Russell

TL;DR
This study examines how Australian physiotherapists used telerehabilitation during and after the pandemic, finding that while it increased, its use dropped significantly once restrictions were lifted.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the factors influencing the sustained use of telerehabilitation in physiotherapy after the pandemic.
Findings
Telerehabilitation use increased from 30% to 94% during the pandemic.
Only 14% of total caseload involved telerehabilitation after restrictions were eased.
Physiotherapists' perceptions about patient preferences and ease of in-person therapy hindered telerehabilitation adoption.
Abstract
Telerehabilitation is a safe and effective means of delivering physiotherapy services, but implementation in clinical practice has not been widespread. This study aimed to explore the shifts in telerehabilitation use throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and the key factors that influenced telerehabilitation caseload after restrictions were eased. Between September and November 2023, physiotherapists practicing in Australian private practice, hospital outpatient, or community settings completed an online survey. Data were collected regarding participants’ use of telerehabilitation before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions to in-person physiotherapy. Qualitative content analysis of open-text questions was performed to garner more nuanced information about the use of telerehabilitation in clinical practice, and quantitative data were analyzed descriptively. The proportion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTelemedicine and Telehealth Implementation · Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Occupational Therapy Practice and Research
