4.6 Article

Improving Physical Activity Through Adjunct Telerehabilitation Following Total Knee Arthroplasty: Randomized Controlled Trial Protocol

期刊

PHYSICAL THERAPY
卷 99, 期 1, 页码 37-45

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ptj/pzy119

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资金

  1. Veterans Affairs Eastern Colorado Health Care System [I01RX00241701A1]
  2. National Institutes of Health [NIH K12 HD055931]
  3. NIH/NCATS Colorado CTSA [UL1 TR002535]
  4. Foundation for Physical Therapy (Promotion of Doctoral Studies Scholarship)

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Background. Physical activity remains low and nearly unchanged from preoperative levels following total knee arthroplasty (TKA), and this is thought to underlie long-term functional limitations, secondary health problems, and higher health care costs after TKA. Objective. Our objective is to determine whether a telehealth-based intervention could improve physical activity and functional outcomes after TKA. Design. The design is a 2-arm, parallel, assessor-blinded, randomized controlled trial with baseline, midintervention, postintervention, and 6-month follow-up assessments. Setting. The setting is one academic medical center and one Veterans Affairs health care system. Participants. One hundred US military veterans (aged 50-85 years) scheduled for unilateral TKA will participate in this study. Intervention. The telehealth-based intervention to change physical activity behavior will be delivered through 10 sessions each of 30 minutes over a 12-week period. Participants will be provided with a wearable physical activity monitor to receive feedback on step count and guide goal-setting. Control participants will receive telehealth-based education on nonbehavioral aspects of health for the same frequency and duration as the intervention group. For both groups, telehealth sessions will occur concurrently with standardized outpatient rehabilitation. Measurements. The primary outcome will be change in physical activity, assessed as daily step counts measured using an accelerometer-based sensor. Secondary outcomes will be measured using the Life-Space Assessment questionnaire and change in physical function (30-Second Chair-Stand Test, Timed Up & Go Test, Six-Minute Walk Test, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index, and Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey). Limitations. Participant and interventionist blinding is not possible. Conclusions. This trial will assess the efficacy of a novel behavior-change intervention to improve physical activity and physical function in patients after TKA. Effective physical activity behavior change could provide clinicians with a technique to augment current practice and resolve poor physical activity outcomes, long-term health problems, and high costs following TKA.

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