Laboratory of Motor Behavior, School of Physical Education and Sport, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
School of Arts, Sciences and Humanities, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Physiother Res Int. 2022 Oct;27(4):e1959. doi: 10.1002/pri.1959. Epub 2022 May 28.
Telemonitoring can maintain daily exercise routine during the COVID-19 pandemic of individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD). However, there are barriers to adherence and attendance with remote physical rehabilitation. The main objective of this study was to evaluate adherence rate, barriers to attendance, and safety of a telemonitoring program for individuals with PD; and secondarily to evaluate the individual and their family members perceived overall experience when performing the telemonitoring physical exercise program.
This was a phase 1 of a clinical trial, engaging 19 individuals with idiopathic PD of an in-person community rehabilitation program. For 24 weeks an asynchronous telemonitoring physical exercise program delivered two sessions per week by video including warm-up, balance, aerobic and resistance exercises, and cool-down. During the remote program were verified: adherence rate at entrance, attendance rate, barriers to attend, safety, and overall experience of the program.
Only one participant did not perform any session and 18 participants completed between 2 and 34 sessions. Participants with a caregiver showed higher attendance rates. The most frequently cited barriers to attend the program were: pain; lack of motor skills; and reduced physical fitness. In relation to safety of the program, the most frequently reported was fear of falling. Although participants reported the telemonitoring program induced health benefits and they had positive experiences for themselves and for their families, most of participants prefer an in-person program. In this sense, the asynchronous telemonitoring physical exercise program was safe, showed moderate adherence, with attendance rate depending on the presence of a companion.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,远程监测可以维持帕金森病(PD)患者的日常运动习惯。然而,远程物理康复存在坚持和参与的障碍。本研究的主要目的是评估 PD 患者远程监测计划的坚持率、参与障碍和安全性;其次是评估个体及其家庭成员在执行远程监测体育锻炼计划时的整体体验。
这是一项临床试验的第 1 阶段,纳入了 19 名正在参加现场社区康复计划的特发性 PD 患者。在 24 周内,通过视频每周提供两次异步远程监测体育锻炼计划,包括热身、平衡、有氧运动和抗阻运动以及冷却。在远程计划期间,验证了以下内容:进入时的坚持率、出勤率、参与障碍、安全性以及对计划的整体体验。
只有 1 名参与者未进行任何课程,18 名参与者完成了 2 至 34 次课程。有照顾者的参与者出勤率更高。参加该计划的最常见障碍是:疼痛;运动技能缺乏;以及身体适应性下降。关于该计划的安全性,最常报告的是害怕跌倒。尽管参与者报告说远程监测计划带来了健康益处,并且他们对自己和家人都有积极的体验,但大多数参与者还是更喜欢现场计划。在这种情况下,异步远程监测体育锻炼计划是安全的,坚持率适中,出勤率取决于是否有同伴。