In-Home Telerehabilitation Compared with Face-to-Face Rehabilitation After Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Noninferiority Randomized Controlled Trial.

@article{Moffet2015InHomeTC,
  title={In-Home Telerehabilitation Compared with Face-to-Face Rehabilitation After Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Noninferiority Randomized Controlled Trial.},
  author={H{\'e}l{\`e}ne Moffet and Michel Tousignant and Sylvie Nadeau and Chantal M{\'e}rette and Patrick Boissy and H{\'e}l{\`e}ne Corriveau and François Marquis and François Cabana and Pierre Ranger and Etienne L. Belzile and Ronald Dimentberg},
  journal={The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume},
  year={2015},
  volume={97 14},
  pages={
          1129-41
        }
}
BACKGROUND The availability of less resource-intensive alternatives to home visits for rehabilitation following orthopaedic surgeries is important, given the increasing need for home care services and the shortage of health resources. The goal of this trial was to determine whether an in-home telerehabilitation program is not clinically inferior to a face-to-face home visit approach (standard care) after hospital discharge of patients following a total knee arthroplasty. METHODS Two hundred… 
Patient Satisfaction with In-Home Telerehabilitation After Total Knee Arthroplasty: Results from a Randomized Controlled Trial.
TLDR
These results, in conjunction with evidences of clinical effectiveness and cost benefits demonstrated in the same sample of patients, strongly support the use of telerehabilitation to improve access to rehabilitation services and efficiency of service delivery after TKA.
Cost Analysis of In-Home Telerehabilitation for Post-Knee Arthroplasty
TLDR
This is the first study of the actual costs of in-home telere rehabilitation covering all subcosts of telerehabilitation and distance between the health care center and the patient’s home.
The Effectiveness of Telerehabilitation as a Supplement to Rehabilitation in Patients After Total Knee or Hip Replacement: Randomized Controlled Trial
TLDR
The effect of the investigated telerehabilitation therapy in patients following knee or hip replacement was equivalent to the usual aftercare in terms of functional testing, quality of life, and pain.
Effectiveness of an interactive telerehabilitation system with home-based exercise training in patients after total hip or knee replacement: study protocol for a multicenter, superiority, no-blinded randomized controlled trial
TLDR
The intervention group is expected to benefit from the interactive, home-based exercise training in many respects represented by the study endpoints, and this approach could be used to enhance the access to aftercare programs, especially in structurally weak areas.
Effects of Virtual Exercise Rehabilitation In-Home Therapy Compared with Traditional Care After Total Knee Arthroplasty: VERITAS, a Randomized Controlled Trial.
BACKGROUND Financial burden for patients, providers, and payers can reduce access to physical therapy (PT) after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The purpose of the present study was to examine the
Tele-rehabilitation versus Face To Face Rehabilitation after Knee Joint Replacement
TLDR
Evaluated whether telerehabilitation performed from a health center to patient’s place after discharge from hospital among knee replacement was practically effective as alternative treatment found it to be equally effective.
Is an in-home telerehabilitation program for people with proximal humerus fracture as effective as a conventional face-to face rehabilitation program? A study protocol for a noninferiority randomized clinical trial
TLDR
It is hypothesized that in-home telerehabilitation will provide a good alternative to conventional rehabilitation, in terms of its efficacy, simplicity, patient satisfaction, and low associated costs.
Home-based Rehabilitation With A Novel Digital Biofeedback System versus Conventional In-person Rehabilitation after Total Knee Replacement: a feasibility study
TLDR
This is the first study to demonstrate that a digital rehabilitation solution can achieve better outcomes than conventional in-person rehabilitation, while less demanding in terms of human resources.
Clinical outcomes of remote asynchronous telerehabilitation are equivalent to traditional therapy following total knee arthroplasty: A randomized control study
TLDR
Clinical outcomes following asynchronous telerehabilitation administered over the web and through a hand-held device were not inferior to those achieved with traditional care and are clinically equivalent to the in-person care model.
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