Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Get Going: Fellow-Led Trial of an Accelerometer-Based Intervention to Promote Physical Activity in Frail Older Adults Transitioning From a Cardiovascular Hospitalization to Home
A multicenter prospective randomized clinical trial testing the hypothesis that a patient-centered actigraphy intervention will result in increased physical activity for frail older adults increase during the critical first 30 days after a cardiovascular hospitalization.
The transition from hospital to home is critical for older patients after a cardiovascular
hospitalization, since 1 in 3 will suffer the fate of functional decline or repeat
hospitalizations within the first 30 days. This has a tremendous impact on the patient,
leading to a vicious cycle of worsening health status and disability, and the healthcare
system, leading to an estimated $12 billion of preventable costs. At the policy level,
preventing readmissions has become a national priority at the forefront of the medical
agenda.
Frailty, a geriatric syndrome characterized by subclinical impairments in multiple organs
and decreased physiologic resiliency, is a major risk factor for unsuccessful transitions of
care and adverse health outcomes. Thus, it has been suggested that interventions aimed at
improving transitions of care should target frail patients. Frail individuals demonstrate a
well-defined phenotype of muscle weakness and physical inactivity, readily measurable using
various scales and instruments. To date, the most widely studied intervention to improve
frailty and related outcomes has been physical activity.
However, fewer than 50% of patients adhere to regular physical activity programs. Enrollment
in cardiac rehabilitation programs is even lower owing to multiple barriers, including lack
of payer reimbursement ≤ 30 days after a hospitalization, the highest risk period for
readmissions. Scientific statements have called for augmented "self-care" to assure adequate
physical activity in patients with heart failure and other forms of cardiovascular disease
10. Moreover, low-intensity home-based physical activity programs can be as efficacious as
higher-intensity center-based programs, strengthening the rationale for self-care.
The advent of small, portable, inexpensive accelerometer devices has emerged as a powerful
tool to facilitate self-monitored physical activity. These devices are worn by patients and
provide real-time feedback about the number of steps walked each day (as well as other
functional parameters). This is in tune with a systematic review which found that feedback
and goal setting improved adherence to physical activity in patients with heart failure. A
few studies in the physical therapist literature have used accelerometers to demonstrate low
baseline physical activity and boost total step counts in patients attending cardiac
rehabilitation, but these patients were at least 30 days removed from their index
hospitalization, and none enrolled patients in the critical post-discharge phase.
Research question: Is a portable actigraphy-based intervention more effective than
standard-of-care in promoting physical activity in the first 30 days after hospital
discharge among frail older adults with cardiovascular disease?
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