Physiotherapy and Guillain–Barré syndrome: results of a national survey

Abstract

Objective

To discover the extent to which persons with Guillain–Barré syndrome receive treatment by a physiotherapist (as inpatients and outpatients), and to assess whether the amount of treatment received is related to outcome.

Design

Survey method using self-administered questionnaires distributed through a national database.

Participants

Members of the Guillain–Barré Syndrome Support Group (n=1535).

Main outcome measures

General patient data, general mobility, F-score, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Short Form-36 and Fatigue Severity Scale.

Results

In total, 884/1535 (58%) complete responses were received. Nearly 10% of respondents had not received treatment by a physiotherapist in hospital despite their average functional level being the same as respondents who had received treatment in hospital. One-quarter of respondents said that they had not received treatment following hospital discharge despite the identification of relatively high levels of disability. Those who did not receive treatment by a physiotherapist following discharge were less severely disabled. This may indicate that physiotherapists tend to offer treatment to more severely disabled patients. The majority of patients reported disabling fatigue; whilst not statistically related to receipt of treatment by a physiotherapist, this highlights the importance of assessing fatigue in treatment plans to improve physical functioning.

Conclusion

Improvements to policy and practice can be made by widening inpatient accessibility to treatment by a physiotherapist and increasing outpatient provision of treatment for patients with Guillain–Barré syndrome of all degrees of severity.

Citation

Physiotherapy and Guillain–Barré syndrome: results of a national survey
Ian Davidson, Charlotte Wilson, Timothy Walton, Shirley Brissenden
Physiotherapy - September 2009 (Vol. 95, Issue 3, Pages 157-163, DOI: 10.1016/j.physio.2009.04.001)