4.5 Article

Smartphone-based home care model improved use of cardiac rehabilitation in postmyocardial infarction patients: results from a randomised controlled trial

Journal

HEART
Volume 100, Issue 22, Pages 1770-1779

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2014-305783

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian eHealth Research Centre
  2. Queensland Health

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Objective Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is pivotal in preventing recurring events of myocardial infarction (MI). This study aims to investigate the effect of a smartphone-based home service delivery (Care Assessment Platform) of CR (CAP-CR) on CR use and health outcomes compared with a traditional, centre-based programme (TCR) in post-MI patients. Methods In this unblinded randomised controlled trial, post-MI patients were randomised to TCR (n=60; 55.7 +/- 10.4 years) and CAP-CR (n=60; 55.5 +/- 9.6 years) for a 6-week CR and 6-month self-maintenance period. CAP-CR, delivered in participants' homes, included health and exercise monitoring, motivational and educational material delivery, and weekly mentoring consultations. CAP-CR uptake, adherence and completion rates were compared with TCR using intention-to-treat analyses. Changes in clinical outcomes (modifiable lifestyle factors, biomedical risk factors and health-related quality of life) across baseline, 6 weeks and 6 months were compared within, and between, groups using linear mixed model regression. Results CAP-CR had significantly higher uptake (80% vs 62%), adherence (94% vs 68%) and completion (80% vs 47%) rates than TCR (p<0.05). Both groups showed significant improvements in 6-minute walk test from baseline to 6 weeks (TCR: 537 +/- 86-584 +/- 99 m; CAP-CR: 510 +/- 77-570 +/- 80 m), which was maintained at 6 months. CAP-CR showed slight weight reduction (89 +/- 20-88 +/- 21 kg) and also demonstrated significant improvements in emotional state (K10: median (IQR) 14.6 (13.4-16.0) to 12.6 (11.5-13.8)), and quality of life (EQ5D-Index: median (IQR) 0.84 (0.8-0.9) to 0.92 (0.9-1.0)) at 6 weeks. Conclusions This smartphone-based home care CR programme improved post-MI CR uptake, adherence and completion. The home-based CR programme was as effective in improving physiological and psychological health outcomes as traditional CR. CAP-CR is a viable option towards optimising use of CR services.

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