Early Ambulation Clinical Trial
Official title:
WalkMORE: Volunteer Walking Coach Program for Hospitalized Internal Medicine Patients, a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
Patients admitted to hospital typically experience periods of decreased activity or bed-rest.
This reduced activity level leads to deconditioning - a loss of muscle mass, muscle strength
(by 2-5% per day), and muscle shortening. Even among patients who were ambulatory at the time
of admission, deconditioning has been linked with deleterious effects, such as increased
rates of falls, functional decline, and frailty. Furthermore, it has been suggested that the
physiological stresses associated with hospitalization - including deconditioning, as well as
sleep deprivation and poor nutrition - makes discharged patients vulnerable to recurrent or
new illnesses and to frailty. This physiological stress-induced vulnerability has been coined
post-hospital syndrome and is thought to have a role in most hospital readmissions.
The investigators hypothesize that by engaging ambulatory patients to walk with trained
volunteer coaches, patients will increase their amount of walking, have less deconditioning
and functional decline, and consequently, fewer falls. Furthermore, the investigators
anticipate that patients who walk with a trained coach will have reduced length-of-stay in
hospital and decreased likelihood of readmission. Finally, as shown in other programs
trialing health coaches, the investigators anticipate an overall improvement in the patient
experience.
Our aim is to demonstrate the feasibility of an intentional walking protocol called WalkMORE,
which pairs trained volunteer coaches with ambulatory patients admitted to the Internal
Medicine unit (4th floor University Hospital), aimed at decreasing deconditioning through
increased walking.
WalkMORE is a single-center randomized controlled trial. The investigators will enroll up to
300 ambulatory patients admitted to the Internal Medicine unit (located on the 4th floor of
University Hospital) who are >18 years of age and are anticipated to require a >48 hour
hospital admission. A maximum of 6 patients will be assigned to each treatment arm at any
given time. The investigators will recruit patients into the WalkMORE program over a 3-month
period. The research coordinator (RC) will screen patients admitted to the Internal Medicine
unit in the preceding 24-hour period to identify patients who fulfill the eligibility
criteria. Patients will be randomized via REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture), a
secure, centralized web-based randomization module to:
1. Standard of care; or
2. WalkMORE Ambulation program + Standard of care. Patients will ambulate with a trained
WalkMORE Volunteer Coach two times per day; once in the morning (0900-1200hrs) and once
in the afternoon (1300-1700hrs), Monday- Friday, until hospital discharge. Patients
randomized to the WalkMORE intervention will be assessed daily by the RC to ensure
patients remain fit for independent ambulation. The duration of each walking session
will be determined daily by the RC and the medical team.
After obtaining written informed consent from eligible patients the RC will randomize
patients, collect demographics, hospital admission details and perform a quality of life
survey (EQ-5D) with all patients. All patients will be assigned a scientific pedometer on the
day of randomization. The modus Health StepWatch™ is an activity monitor worn on the ankle
via a velcro strap. It is a small, lightweight device that will count and record patients'
steps throughout their hospital stay. The device is smaller than a deck of cards (7.5 x 5.0 x
2.0 cm) and weighs 38 grams and will be installed by the RC. The total number of steps
recorded on the pedometer will be collected for each patient every day until hospital
discharge. For patients randomized to the WalkMORE intervention arm, the total number of
minutes walked with a volunteer coach will also be recorded for each session until discharge.
Functional ability will be measured on the third day post-randomization and every three days
thereafter until hospital discharge, using the Timed Up and Go test (patients will be asked
to stand up from a chair, walk three metres, turn around, walk back to the chair, and sit).
After hospital discharge the RC will follow up with patients for 2 brief telephone
interviews. On day 3 after discharge, Patient Satisfaction surveys will be conducted by the
RC to assess patient satisfaction with their experience with the WalkMORE program. These
telephone surveys will be reviewed and approved by Lisa Hawthorne of the Patient Experience
Office. On day 30 after discharge the RC will contact patients to conduct a brief quality of
life survey and to collect data regarding clinical outcomes (ER visits, re-hospitalizations,
and falls). Each telephone interview is expected to last approximately 10-15 minutes.
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