Review Exploring rest advice in fatigue interventions in rehabilitation among adults with long-term conditions:... 2025 Hettinga et al

Discussion in 'Other health news and research' started by Andy, Feb 16, 2025.

  1. Andy

    Andy Retired committee member

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    Full title: Exploring rest advice in fatigue interventions in rehabilitation among adults with long-term conditions: a systematic scoping review of the reporting of rest in randomised controlled trials.

    Abstract

    Objective
    To explore how rest is described or included as part of rest advice in fatigue interventions within rehabilitation for adults with Long-term conditions (LTC).

    Data sources
    This scoping review identified fatigue interventions through PubMed, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, the Allied and Complementary Medicine Database, and the Physiotherapy Evidence Database, from inception to July 2024.

    Study selection
    Two independent reviewers screened and selected the articles. Studies were included if they: (1) involved adults with LTC, (2) used non-pharmacological fatigue interventions, (3) had fatigue as the primary outcome, and (4) were randomised controlled trials (5). Only randomised controlled trials that include rest advice in the interventions were selected.

    Data extraction
    Extracted data included the first author's name, year of publication, country, type of LTC, intervention category, specific interventions, how rest was reported in all interventions. Furthermore, rest was reported using the FITT principle, focusing on the frequency, intensity, duration, and type of rest in the exercise interventions and key conclusions.

    Data synthesis
    Results were summarised, tabulated, and reported descriptively. Out of 13,645 initial records, 56 studies were included in the review. Of the total interventions analysed, 55.4% (31/56) were classified as physical activity interventions, 14.3% (8/56) as psychological interventions (e.g., cognitive behavioural therapy), 12.5% (7/56) were identified as energy management strategies, 8.9% (5/56) as educational interventions, and 8.9% (5/56) as activity pacing strategies. A disparity was observed in the instruction of rest advice between exercise interventions and daily fatigue management strategies. Specifically, physical activity interventions tended to adopt a more prescriptive approach to rest, whereas rest in daily fatigue management strategies was primarily instructed through education on the importance of rest in daily life. Notably, the level of detail provided in reporting rest parameters was generally limited.

    Conclusions
    This review found insufficient reporting of rest, highlighting a significant gap and indicating the need for improved documentation and standardisation of rest in fatigue interventions. Future research is necessary to better understand the role of rest in the rehabilitation of LTC.

    Open access
     
  2. Andy

    Andy Retired committee member

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    Studies were excluded if they were of a "LTC with no biological/underlying cause (E.g., chronic fatigue syndrome, Fibromyalgia)".
     
  3. Utsikt

    Utsikt Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I hope they meant ‘no known cause’, but I’m not optimistic..
     
  4. Sean

    Sean Moderator Staff Member

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    standardisation of rest in fatigue interventions

    People should rest when they need to. Nothing more, nothing less.

    This obsession with 'standardising' everything is half the damn problem.
     
    Starlight, Utsikt, Trish and 4 others like this.
  5. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Even more absurd is that it's standardizing things that are all entirely 'individualized'. Of course they're not actually individualized, or standardized. It's all just buzzwords trying to justify an industry for which no need actually exists, but the whole inventory has been bought and almost no one cares that it's all a giant scam.
     

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