Objectives: To determine the impact of discharge home on physical activity and sedentary behaviour following orthopaedic trauma. Design: Observational study. Setting: Acute hospital. Participants: Between October 2022 and January 2024, 31 adult orthopaedic trauma patients were recruited during hospital admission. Participants had either an isolated hip fracture or multi-trauma (i.e., a lower limb fracture, with an upper limb and/or spinal fracture). Interventions: Participants wore two activity monitors (activPAL3 and ActiGraphGT3x) during the final days of an acute hospital admission and the first five days at home. An interrupted time series analysis evaluated changes physical activity variables during the hospital to home transition. Participants were analysed individually using mixed-effects linear regression allowing the intercept to vary by participant. Main outcome measures: Primary outcome was daily steps; secondary outcomes included sedentary time and other activity measures. Results: Daily steps (mean +- SD) were higher at home (4552.4 +- 2639.5) compared to hospital (2597.8 +- 1450.8). Modelled results indicated a 27% increase in daily steps following hospital discharge (exp(beta946;): 1.27, 95% CI: 1.01,1.59, p=0.039) and a sustained improvement at home. No significant differences were observed between hip fracture and multi-trauma participants. Conclusion: Participants recovering from orthopaedic trauma showed a significant increase in daily step count upon discharge home from hospital, highlighting the positive impact of the home environment on activity levels. Further research is warranted to assess the effectiveness of interventions to improve activity levels in hospital (e.g., early intensive therapy) and at home (e.g., immediate home-based physiotherapy) in individuals following orthopaedic trauma.
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