La Trobe

Perceived Autonomy Support in Telerehabilitation by People With Chronic Respiratory Disease: A Mixed Methods Study

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-06, 01:02 authored by Narelle CoxNarelle Cox, Joanna YT Lee, Christine F McDonald, Ajay Mahal, Jennifer A Alison, Richard Wootton, Catherine J Hill, Paolo Zanaboni, Paul O'HalloranPaul O'Halloran, Janet Bondarenko, Heather Macdonald, Kathryn Barker, Hayley Crute, Christie Mellerick, Bruna Wageck, Helen Boursinos, Aroub Lahham, Amanda Nichols, Pawel Czupryn, Monique Corbett, Emma Handley, Angela Burge, Anne Holland

Background: Autonomy-supportive health environments can assist patients in achieving behavior change and can influence adherence positively. Telerehabilitation may increase access to rehabilitation services, but creating an autonomy-supportive environment may be challenging. Research Question: To what degree does telerehabilitation provide an autonomy-supportive environment? What is the patient experience of an 8-week telerehabilitation program? Study Design and Methods: Individuals undertaking telerehabilitation or center-based pulmonary rehabilitation within a larger randomized controlled equivalence trial completed the Health Care Climate Questionnaire (HCCQ; short form) to assess perceived autonomy support. Telerehabilitation participants were invited 1:1 to undertake semistructured interviews. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and coded thematically to identify major themes and subthemes. Results: One hundred thirty-six participants (n = 69 telerehabilitation) completed the HCCQ and 30 telerehabilitation participants (42%) undertook interviews. HCCQ summary scores indicated that participants strongly agreed that the telerehabilitation environment was autonomy supportive, which was similar to center-based participants (HCCQ summary score, P = .6; individual HCCQ items, P ≥ .3). Telerehabilitation interview data supported quantitative findings identifying five major themes, with subthemes, as follows: (1) making it easier to participate in pulmonary rehabilitation, because telerehabilitation was convenient, saved time and money, and offered flexibility; (2) receiving support in a variety of ways, including opportunities for peer support and receiving an individualized program guided by expert staff; (3) internal and external motivation to exercise as a consequence of being in a supervised group, seeing results for effort, and being inspired by others; (4) achieving success through provision of equipment and processes to prepare and support operation of equipment and technology; and (5) after the rehabilitation program, continuing to exercise, but dealing with feelings of loss. Interpretation: Telerehabilitation was perceived as an autonomy-supportive environment, in part by making it easier to undertake pulmonary rehabilitation. Support for behavior change, understanding, and motivation were derived from clinicians and patient-peers. The extent to which autonomy support translates into ongoing self-management and behavior change is not clear.

Funding

Funding for this trial was from a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) project grant [GNT 1101616] awarded to A. E. H., C. F. M., J. A. A., A. M., and R. W. as the chief investigators. N. S. C. held an NHMRC Early Career Fellowship [GNT 1119970] for this work.

History

Publication Date

2023-06-01

Journal

Chest

Volume

163

Issue

6

Pagination

15p. (p. 1410-1424)

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0012-3692

Rights Statement

© 2023 American College of Chest Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.