Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Balance and mobility limitations can lead to increased difficulty with everyday function and increased dependence on caregivers. Adults with balance and mobility limitations need access to safe and beneficial exercise programs to maintain or improve their health. Task-oriented exercise programs designed for adults with balance and mobility limitations incorporating a healthcare-community partnership, are safe and feasible to implement in the community setting. In this model, trained fitness instructors deliver the exercise program, and a registered healthcare professional in a healthcare partner role provides ongoing support through class visits, email communication with instructors, and program referrals. One example is Together in Movement and Exercise (TIME™) program which was developed by physical therapists at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network (TRI-UHN). Research has shown that the in-person TIME™ program has the potential to improve everyday function, independence, and social participation in people with neurological conditions. Virtual delivery of these programs is needed to address barriers to attending in-person exercise programs. Barriers can include inadequate access to transportation, inclement weather, distance to community centres, and community centre closures during pandemic situations. This is a before-and-after study to evaluate the potential benefit, safety, and feasibility of the virtual TIME™ program (called at TIME™ at Home), delivered using a group-based, 8-week program format, among people with balance and mobility limitations. Also, the aim is to describe the experiences of participants, caregivers, healthcare partners, and program facilitators and coordinators with the program to make recommendations for improvement.


Clinical Trial Description

Balance and mobility limitations can adversely affect everyday functioning and accelerate dependence on caregivers leading to institutionalization. Previous literature has suggested that a group, task-oriented community-based exercise program (CBEP), targeting balance and mobility (i.e., capacity for walking, transfers, sit-to-stand, stairs), implemented through an innovative healthcare-community partnership (CBEP-HCP), has the potential to improve everyday function, independence and social participation in persons with stroke. The Together in Movement and Exercise (TIME™) program is a licensed, group, task-oriented community-based exercise program incorporating a healthcare-community partnership for adults with balance and mobility limitations. Physical therapists at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network (TRI-UHN), developed the TIME™ program. Trained fitness instructors deliver the exercise program face-to-face (in-person) in community centres and a healthcare professional who serves as a healthcare partner provides ongoing support. The program has been offered in over 50 community centres across Canada. Virtual delivery of CBEP-HCPs is needed to address barriers to attending in-person exercise programs among people with balance and mobility limitations. Barriers can include inadequate access to transportation, inclement weather, distance to community centres, and community centre closures during pandemic situations. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the investigators used an iterative process to develop an online version of the TIME™ program, called TIME™ at Home. TIME™ at Home is a standardized, community-based program licensed by the UHN involving the delivery of video-based task-oriented exercises. The exercises in the video were adapted from the classic in-person TIME™ program and were considered safe for people with balance and mobility limitations to perform at home. In addition to a warm-up and cool-down, the video shows a physical therapist and an occupational therapist performing each exercise at two difficulty levels. Participants are asked to self-pace and self-select the difficulty level that feels right for them. A trained facilitator at a community organization streams the video for people with balance and mobility limitations using Zoom. The TIME™ at Home program, due to its virtual nature, has potential to improve exercise participation in remote and isolated settings. Unlike the in-person program, it does not require participants to be physically present at a community centre, thus eliminating some common barriers like lack of (adaptive) transportation, difficulty with transportation during inclement weather, long travel times to community centres from rural settings, and inadequate building access. The program can be delivered at home with minimal equipment. Also, the program involves showing standardized exercise videos developed by physical therapists and occupational therapists at TRI-UHN which prevents the need to train fitness instructors to deliver the program. Therefore, TIME™ at Home has potential for reducing barriers encountered with delivering in-person standardized exercise programs in community-based settings. Pilot research to date on the TIME™ at Home Program (Virtual Program) Program developers at TRI-UHN in collaboration with our research group have evaluated the feasibility of components of the virtual TIME™ at Home Program in partnership with the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada and Abilities Centre in Whitby (Ontario). Findings support the safety of delivering TIME™ at Home using a drop-in format. The safety, feasibility, and potential benefit of a group-based format, class visits from a healthcare partner, and a post-class social time to facilitate social support, have not been comprehensively evaluated. Thus, the study objectives are: 1. To evaluate the feasibility, safety, and potential to improve everyday functioning, lower extremity strength, functional mobility, balance self-efficacy, mood, caregiver mood, and perceived health status, of an 8-week, group, virtual, task-oriented community exercise program called TIME™ at Home, among people with balance and mobility limitations. 2. To describe the experiences of exercise participants, caregivers, healthcare partners, and program facilitators and coordinators with TIME™ at Home (using qualitative data collection and analyses). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05369741
Study type Interventional
Source University of Toronto
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 22, 2022
Completion date July 31, 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT06396247 - Impact of Brief Daily Functional Resistance Training on Lower Extremity Physical Performance Phase 2/Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT05975476 - Comparison of Two Park-Based Activities on Emotional Well-Being in Adults With Mobility Impairments N/A
Completed NCT01647802 - Cross-over Study of Three Modular Devices for Aid in Patient Standing and Transfer N/A
Completed NCT01614392 - Lower Extremity Muscle and Function in the Elderly: Study 2 N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05736484 - Randomized Clinical Trial to Improve Mobility After Hospitalization N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05678985 - Evaluating Impact and Implementation of Choose to Move (Phase 4) N/A
Completed NCT06025656 - Assessment of the Reliability and Validity of the Leg Lateral Reach Test in Adolescent Tennis Players N/A
Completed NCT04760392 - Goal-directed Mobilization of Medical Inpatients N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT06434298 - Continued Evaluation of Choose to Move (CTM) Phase 4 N/A
Recruiting NCT05516030 - HIFT for People With Mobility-Related Disabilities N/A
Recruiting NCT06264362 - Developing a Nonpharmacological Pain Intervention for Community-dwelling Older Adults With Dementia N/A
Withdrawn NCT04044846 - Promoting Movement in Older Adults in the Community N/A
Terminated NCT03558841 - Effect of Lyra Gait Training on the Mobility of Geriatric Rehabilitation Inpatients N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03675490 - ABLE (Arts-Based Exercise Enhancing LongEvity) N/A
Completed NCT02913963 - Changes on Pain and Range of Motion by the Use of Kinesio Taping in Subjects With Myofascial Trigger Point N/A
Completed NCT02913976 - Changes on Pain and Range of Motion by the Use of Kinesio Taping in Patients Diagnosed With Cervical Pain N/A
Completed NCT05081856 - Use Modular Medical Equipment Vehicle in Mobilization of Patient With Chest Tube N/A
Withdrawn NCT02298374 - Evaluation of Homecare Reablement, the Trondheim Model N/A
Completed NCT02498704 - Dry Needling and Stretching vs. Stretching Alone on Hamstring Flexibility in Patients With Knee Pain N/A
Completed NCT00177359 - Restoring Skill in Walking Phase 2