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Promoting Activity in Geriatric Rehabilitation: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Accelerometry

Low activity levels in inpatient rehabilitation are associated with adverse outcomes. The study aimed to test whether activity levels can be increased by the provision of monitored activity data to patients and clinicians in the context of explicit goal setting. A randomized controlled trial in thre...

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Published in:PloS one 2016-08, Vol.11 (8), p.e0160906-e0160906
Main Authors: Peel, Nancye M, Paul, Sanjoy K, Cameron, Ian D, Crotty, Maria, Kurrle, Susan E, Gray, Leonard C
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description Low activity levels in inpatient rehabilitation are associated with adverse outcomes. The study aimed to test whether activity levels can be increased by the provision of monitored activity data to patients and clinicians in the context of explicit goal setting. A randomized controlled trial in three sites in Australia included 255 inpatients aged 60 and older who had a rehabilitation goal to become ambulant. The primary outcome was patients' walking time measured by accelerometers during the rehabilitation admission. Walking times from accelerometry were made available daily to treating therapists and intervention participants to motivate patients to improve incidental activity levels and reach set goals. For the control group, 'usual care' was followed, including the setting of mobility goals; however, for this group, neither staff nor patients received data on walking times to aid the setting of daily walking time targets. The median daily walking time in the intervention group increased from 10.3 minutes at baseline to 32.1 minutes at day 28, compared with an increase from 9.5 to 26.5 minutes per day in the control group. Subjects in the intervention group had significantly higher non-therapy walking time by about 7 minutes [mean (95% CI): 24.6 (21.7, 27.4)] compared to those in the control group [mean(95% CI): 17.3 (14.4, 20.3)] (p = 0.001). Daily feedback to patients and therapists using an accelerometer increased walking times during rehabilitation admissions. The results of this study suggest objective monitoring of activity levels could provide clinicians with information on clinically important, mobility-related activities to assist goal setting. Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12611000034932 http://www.ANZCTR.org.au/.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0160906
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subjects Accelerometers
Accelerometry
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Amputation
Australia
Biology and Life Sciences
Care and treatment
Clinical trials
Control methods
Elder care
Elderly patients
Engineering and Technology
Exercise
Feasibility studies
Feedback
Female
Frail Elderly
Frailty
Geriatrics
Geriatrics - methods
Goals
Hospitalization
Hospitals
Humans
Inpatients
Intervention
Male
Medical research
Medicine and Health Sciences
Middle Aged
Mobility
Motivation
Older people
Patients
People and Places
Physical fitness
Physical medicine and rehabilitation
Physical Therapy Modalities
Physiological aspects
Randomization
Rehabilitation
Rehabilitation - methods
Stroke
Subacute care
Systematic review
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Walking
title Promoting Activity in Geriatric Rehabilitation: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Accelerometry
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