Adherence Clinical Trial
Official title:
Home-Based Telemedicine Management of Patients Affected by Chronic Neck Pain
The aim of the study is to investigate if a home-based structured physician-directed,
nurse-managed telemedicine program can increase adherence to a home exercise program and
decrease neck pain and disability.
The study is carried out in 100 consecutive patients with chronic non-specific neck pain.
All patients referred to a rehabilitation Institute for an out-.patient visit complete a
stretching exercise program and are instructed and encouraged to perform exercises regularly
once at home. At the end of the rehabilitation, the patients are randomized into two groups
of 50 patients each. Patients of the first Group are allocated to a home-based telemedicine
(HBT), while those of the second group receive only the recommendation to continue
exercising at home (Control group). The HBT intervention consists of fortnightly scheduled
phone calls to patients over the 6-month course of the study. A nurse-tutor encourages the
patient to perform regularly physical activity and prescribes exercises.
Adherence to home exercises is evaluated 15 days and 6 months after the end of the
outpatient rehabilitation, while pain intensity and neck disability are assessed and
compared in the two groups at entry and 6 months after the end of the outpatient
rehabilitation .
Systematic reviews have concluded that exercises taught individually and prescribed to be
performed at home, are effective in decreasing neck pain and avoiding recurrence of neck
pain (re-exacerbations) if patients adhere to the home exercise program. Conversely,
inadequate adherence to a home-based exercise program reduces the treatment's efficacy.
Telemedicine is already employed in many fields of medicine to evaluate health status,
treatment, education, and to monitor patients' care needs but not in management of the
patients with chronic neck pain. Studies available in the literature have not yet clearly
defined if a phone surveillance program is effective in decreasing pain in these patients.
Conversely, we think that telemedicine may be a useful tool for physicians in management of
chronic neck pain because it can increase adherence to home exercises program thus reducing
neck pain and disability in these patients. To verify this hypothesis we perform this
prospective randomized controlled study.
The study is performed in 100 consecutive patients with chronic non-specific neck pain
referred to the outpatient facility of our Rehabilitation Department.
Patients have to be > 18 years and with neck pain duration more than 6 months. Exclusion
criteria are: pain duration < 6 months, cognitive deficit, history of fracture or operations
around the neck region, presence of inflammatory rheumatic diseases, neurological diseases
that could lead to neck pain, infections or tumors, pregnancy, previous rehabilitation for
neck pain undergone within the last 12 months, and inability to attend all exercise sessions
of our outpatient rehabilitation program.
All patients have to complete, as outpatients, an exercise program consisting of 10
sessions, spread over a 2-week period (5 days/week), and including six stretching exercises
for the neck.
Patients are instructed individually by a physical therapist on how to perform each exercise
and, after the first rehabilitation session, are encouraged to exercise regularly at home.
Written and illustrated material explaining the home exercises are provided to all patients.
At the end of the outpatient rehabilitation program, patients are randomized (using a
randomization list provided by the statistical consultant) into two groups of 50 patients
each. Patients of the first group are allocated to a home-based telemedicine (HBT) program
for 6 months (HBT group), while those of the second group receive only recommendations to
continue the exercises at home (Control group).
The HBT intervention consists of fortnightly scheduled phone calls to patients over the
6-month course of the study. A nurse-tutor collects information on: disease status, pain,
disability, prodromal symptoms of exacerbation, number of home exercise sessions performed,
and use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. In consultation with the physiatrist, the
nurse gives advice on solutions for persistent pain and any symptoms of exacerbation. The
patient is always encouraged to perform regularly the physical activity and the exercises
prescribed. The physiatrist is involved as a second-opinion consultant.
The patients are evaluated at entry and 6 months after the end of the outpatient
rehabilitation by the same qualified physiatrist. At entry, scales of demonstrated
reliability, validity and sensitivity are administered to assess comorbidity (evaluated with
Cumulative Illness Rating Scale-Geriatrics), pain severity (10-point analogue scale), neck
range of motion (manual goniometer), and neck disability (Neck Disability Index). Adherence
to home exercises is evaluated 15 days and 6 months after the end of the outpatient
rehabilitation and is self-reported.
Differences in adherence to home exercises, pain intensity and neck disability, between
baseline and 6-month follow up, are assessed and compared in the two groups.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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