Division of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health and Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
Health Sciences and Technologies-Interdepartmental Center for Industrial Research, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
BMJ Open. 2019 Sep 18;9(9):e028100. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028100.
Falls have major implications for quality of life, independence and cost to the health service. Strength and balance training has been found to be effective in reducing the rate/risk of falls, as long as there is adequate fidelity to the evidence-based programme. Health services are often unable to deliver the evidence-based dose of exercise and older adults do not always sufficiently adhere to their programme to gain full outcomes. Smartphone technology based on behaviour-change theory has been used to support healthy lifestyles, but not falls prevention exercise. This feasibility trial will explore whether smartphone technology can support patients to better adhere to an evidence-based rehabilitation programme and test study procedures/outcome measures.
A two-arm, pragmatic feasibility randomised controlled trial will be conducted with health services in Manchester, UK. Seventy-two patients aged 50+years eligible for a falls rehabilitation exercise programme from two community services will receive: (1) standard service with a smartphone for outcome measurement only or (2) standard service plus a smartphone including the motivational smartphone app. The primary outcome is feasibility of the intervention, study design and procedures. The secondary outcome is to compare standard outcome measures for falls, function and adherence to instrumented versions collected using smartphone. Outcome measures collected include balance, function, falls, strength, fear of falling, health-related quality of life, resource use and adherence. Outcomes are measured at baseline, 3 and 6-month post-randomisation. Interviews/focus groups with health professionals and participants further explore feasibility of the technology and trial procedures. Primarily analyses will be descriptive.
The study protocol is approved by North West Greater Manchester East Research Ethics Committee (Rec ref:18/NW/0457, 9/07/2018). User groups and patient representatives were consulted to inform trial design, and are involved in study recruitment. Results will be reported at conferences and in peer-reviewed publications. A dissemination event will be held in Manchester to present the results of the trial. The protocol adheres to the recommended Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) checklist.
ISRCTN12830220; Pre-results.
跌倒对生活质量、独立性和医疗服务成本都有重大影响。研究发现,只要有足够的证据基础方案的保真度,力量和平衡训练可以有效降低跌倒率/风险。医疗服务往往无法提供基于证据的运动剂量,老年人也不能始终充分遵守他们的方案以获得全部结果。基于行为改变理论的智能手机技术已被用于支持健康的生活方式,但不能预防跌倒的运动。这项可行性试验将探索智能手机技术是否可以支持患者更好地遵守基于证据的康复方案,并测试研究程序/结果测量。
将在英国曼彻斯特的两个社区服务机构中进行一项两臂、实用可行性随机对照试验。72 名 50 岁以上的患者符合参加跌倒康复运动计划的条件,他们将被分为两组:(1)仅使用智能手机进行结果测量的标准服务或(2)标准服务加包括激励性智能手机应用程序的智能手机。主要结果是干预措施、研究设计和程序的可行性。次要结果是比较使用智能手机收集的仪器化版本的跌倒、功能和遵医率的标准结果测量。收集的结果测量包括平衡、功能、跌倒、力量、跌倒恐惧、健康相关生活质量、资源使用和遵医率。结果在随机分组后 3 个月和 6 个月进行测量。对卫生专业人员和参与者进行访谈/焦点小组进一步探讨技术和试验程序的可行性。主要分析将是描述性的。
该研究方案已获得西北大曼彻斯特东研究伦理委员会的批准(Rec ref:18/NW/0457,2018 年 7 月 9 日)。用户群体和患者代表参与了试验设计的咨询,并且参与了研究招募。结果将在会议和同行评审出版物中报告。将在曼彻斯特举行一次传播活动,以介绍试验结果。该方案符合推荐的干预试验标准方案项目建议清单(SPIRIT)。
ISRCTN81435102;预结果。