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Published in: BMC Medicine 1/2013

Open Access 01-12-2013 | Erratum

Erratum to: Additional Saturday rehabilitation improves functional independence and quality of life and reduces length of stay: a randomized controlled trial

Authors: Casey L Peiris, Nora Shields, Natasha K Brusco, Jennifer J Watts, Nicholas F Taylor

Published in: BMC Medicine | Issue 1/2013

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Excerpt

On reviewing our recently published trial in BMC Medicine [1], we realised that there were some minor errors in the demographic data reported in Table 1 and in 2 sentences of the accompanying text. Specifically, our sample comprised 365 men, not 359 as reported, and there were some very minor differences in the numbers of participants reported in each diagnostic category. The main contributing factors for the minor errors were misinterpretation of gender neutral first names, and grouping of the diagnostic codes assigned during data collection for reporting. We believe these changes do not affect the results or conclusions of our study, and are confident in the processes we employed (full double data entry by two independent teams) to ensure the integrity of the rest of our data. Table 1 has been corrected and the first two sentences in the accompanying text in the methods when describing the participants should read: Participants had a mean (SD) age of 74 (13) years and 631 (63%) were women (Table 1). A total of 581 (58%) participants were admitted with an orthopedic diagnosis, 203 (20%) with a neurological diagnosis and 212 (21%) participants were admitted with other disabling impairments. A total of 94% of participants were living independently in the community prior to their acute hospital admission.
Table 1
Baseline characteristics
Characteristic
Randomized (n = 996)
 
Intervention
Control
 
(n = 496)
(n = 500)
Age in years, mean (SD)
75 (13)
74 (13)
Age group, n (%)
  ≤ 59 years
63 (13)
72 (14)
 60 to 79 years
236 (48)
234 (47)
  ≥ 80 years
197 (40)
194 (39)
Gender, n male (%)
189 (38)
176 (35)
Diagnosis category, n (%)
 Stroke
81 (16)
79 (16)
 Other neurological conditions
19 (4)
24 (5)
 Orthopedic conditions
284 (57)
297 (59)
 Pain syndromes
24 (5)
19 (4)
 Cardiac/Pulmonary
25 (5)
23 (5)
 Other disabling impairments
63 (13)
58 (12)
Functional independence (FIM)
 Total, mean (SD)
83 (20)
83 (21)
 Mobility component, mean (SD)
16 (7)
16 (7)
 Self-care component, mean (SD)
27 (8)
27 (8)
 Cognitive component, mean (SD)
31 (6)
31 (6)
Health-related quality of life
EQ-5D utility index, mean (SD)
0.32(0.35)
0.37(0.35)
Visual analog scale (0 to 100 mm), mean (SD)
57(21)
56(22)
Charlson comorbidity index, mean (SD)
1 (1)
1 (1)
Living independently in the community prior to admission, n (%)
466 (94)
466 (93)
Intervention = Monday to Saturday rehabilitation, control = Monday to Friday rehabilitation.
EQ-5D EuroQoL five dimensions questionnaire.
Literature
1.
go back to reference Peiris CL, Shields N, Brusco NK, Watts JJ, Taylor NF: Additional Saturday rehabilitation improves functional independence and quality of life and reduces length of stay: a randomized controlled trial. BMC Medicine. 2013, 11: 198-10.1186/1741-7015-11-198.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Peiris CL, Shields N, Brusco NK, Watts JJ, Taylor NF: Additional Saturday rehabilitation improves functional independence and quality of life and reduces length of stay: a randomized controlled trial. BMC Medicine. 2013, 11: 198-10.1186/1741-7015-11-198.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
Metadata
Title
Erratum to: Additional Saturday rehabilitation improves functional independence and quality of life and reduces length of stay: a randomized controlled trial
Authors
Casey L Peiris
Nora Shields
Natasha K Brusco
Jennifer J Watts
Nicholas F Taylor
Publication date
01-12-2013
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Medicine / Issue 1/2013
Electronic ISSN: 1741-7015
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1741-7015-11-262

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