Ahuja Manan, Siddhpuria Shailee, Reppas-Rindlisbacher Christina, Wong Eric, Gormley Jessica, Lee Justin, Patterson Christopher
Division of Geriatric Medicine, Department of Medicine McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada.
Department of Undergraduate Medicine University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
Health Sci Rep. 2022 Apr 26;5(3):e608. doi: 10.1002/hsr2.608. eCollection 2022 May.
Activity monitors, such as Fitbits®, are being used increasingly for research purposes and data have been validated in healthy community-dwelling older adults. Given the lack of research in older adults with neurocognitive disorders, we investigated the consistency of sleep data recorded from a wrist-worn activity monitor in this population.
Fitbit® activity monitors were worn by hospitalized older adults as part of a parent study investigating sleep and step count in patients recovering from hip fracture surgery in a tertiary care academic hospital in Hamilton, Canada between March 2018 and June 2019. In this secondary analysis, we compared the proportion of missing sleep data between participants with and without a neurocognitive disorder and used a multivariable model to assess the association between neurocognitive disorder and missing sleep data.
Of 67 participants included in the analysis, 22 had a neurocognitive disorder (median age: 86.5 years). Sleep data were missing for 47% of the neurocognitive disorder group and 23% of the non-neurocognitive disorder group. The presence of a neurocognitive disorder was associated with an increased likelihood of missing sleep data using the Fitbit® activity monitors (adjusted odds ratio: 3.41; 95% confidence interval: 1.06-11.73, = 0.04).
The inconsistent nature of sleep data tracking in hospitalized older adults with neurocognitive disorders highlights the challenges of using interventions in patient populations who are often excluded from validation studies. As opportunities expand for activity monitoring in persons with neurocognitive disorders, novel technologies not previously studied in this group should be used with caution.
诸如Fitbits®等活动监测器越来越多地用于研究目的,并且数据已在健康的社区居住老年人中得到验证。鉴于对患有神经认知障碍的老年人缺乏研究,我们调查了该人群中通过腕戴式活动监测器记录的睡眠数据的一致性。
在加拿大汉密尔顿一家三级医疗学术医院进行的一项关于髋部骨折手术康复患者睡眠和步数计数的母研究中,住院老年人佩戴Fitbits®活动监测器。在这项二次分析中,我们比较了有和没有神经认知障碍的参与者之间睡眠数据缺失的比例,并使用多变量模型评估神经认知障碍与睡眠数据缺失之间的关联。
纳入分析的67名参与者中,22人患有神经认知障碍(中位年龄:86.5岁)。神经认知障碍组47%的人睡眠数据缺失,非神经认知障碍组为23%。使用Fitbits®活动监测器时,神经认知障碍的存在与睡眠数据缺失的可能性增加相关(调整后的优势比:3.41;95%置信区间:1.06 - 11.73,P = 0.04)。
患有神经认知障碍的住院老年人睡眠数据追踪的不一致性凸显了在通常被排除在验证研究之外的患者群体中使用干预措施的挑战。随着对神经认知障碍患者进行活动监测的机会增加,此前未在该群体中研究过的新技术应谨慎使用。