Physical Therapist-Led Care
Cross-source consensus on Physical Therapist-Led Care from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
Dosage & preparation
Preparation
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- The HIPSTER intervention combines patient education with exercise therapy. — Effectiveness of a structured physical therapist-led intervention compared to usual care in people with longstanding hip and groin pain referred to orthopaedic care in Sweden: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (the HIPSTER trial)
- The HIPSTER model is a 16-week structured, individualized, progressive physical therapist-led package in primary care. — Effectiveness of a structured physical therapist-led intervention compared to usual care in people with longstanding hip and groin pain referred to orthopaedic care in Sweden: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (the HIPSTER trial)
- Patients receive 8 to 16 supervised sessions during the HIPSTER intervention. — Effectiveness of a structured physical therapist-led intervention compared to usual care in people with longstanding hip and groin pain referred to orthopaedic care in Sweden: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (the HIPSTER trial)
- Evidence is limited on whether structured reproducible physical therapist-led interventions outperform usual care. — Effectiveness of a structured physical therapist-led intervention compared to usual care in people with longstanding hip and groin pain referred to orthopaedic care in Sweden: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (the HIPSTER trial)
- Physical therapist-led care is recommended as first-line management for longstanding hip and groin pain. — Effectiveness of a structured physical therapist-led intervention compared to usual care in people with longstanding hip and groin pain referred to orthopaedic care in Sweden: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (the HIPSTER trial)
- Physical therapists delivering HIPSTER receive training and treatment manuals. — Effectiveness of a structured physical therapist-led intervention compared to usual care in people with longstanding hip and groin pain referred to orthopaedic care in Sweden: protocol for a randomised controlled trial (the HIPSTER trial)