Journal
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE & REHABILITATION
Volume 102, Issue 11, Pages 984-989Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/PHM.0000000000002257
Keywords
Musculoskeletal Pain; Pain Management; Exercise Therapy; Chronic Pain; Telemedicine; Mobile Health
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This study retrospectively observed data from 3109 individuals with musculoskeletal pain participating in an mHealth exercise program, and found that the program was associated with a significant decrease in pain and an increase in perceived benefits. These findings suggest the feasibility of using mHealth exercise interventions as scalable tools to improve outcomes of chronic musculoskeletal pain.
Context Chronic musculoskeletal pain costs the US $980 billion annually. Conservative treatments are the criterion standard, but scalable methods of treatment remain to be evaluated.Objective The aim of the study is to determine the effects of pain reduction and the perceived benefits of an mHealth exercise therapy program.Design This is a retrospective observational study on data from 3109 people (18-98, 49% female) with musculoskeletal pain in an mHealth exercise program. Presession pain was measured via 11-point numeric rating scale and nonstandardized single-item questions for work and quality of life; all were analyzed using mixed-effects models.Results By 11 sessions, there was an estimated a 2.09-point decrease in average numeric rating scale pain levels. There was an average percent increase of approximately 0.7 points for work life and quality of life (tdf=6,632 = 12.06, P < 0.001). User engagement was high; 46% of participants were performing more than one session per day, and 88% were engaging within a week, indicating the feasibility of the deployment of an mHealth exercise app.Conclusions An mHealth exercise program was associated with significant decrease in pain and increased perceived benefits in a large population. These findings serve as preliminary findings of the feasibility for mHealth exercise interventions as scalable tools to improve chronic musculoskeletal pain outcomes.
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