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Clinical Trial Summary

Support for physical activity is necessary to sustain health and reduce the risk of stroke recurrence after stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA). Still, rehabilitation services are not available to many of those who potentially would benefit from such services largely due to barriers related to accessibility. While mobile health is a promising strategy to support physical activity, there is a gap in knowledge regarding the implementation of technology that meet the needs of people post stroke or TIA in order to foster adherence and engagement in physical activity. This project therefore seeks to improve health and reduce the risk of recurrent stroke among people post stroke or TIA by increasing the access to physical activity through telehealth. The present project builds on experiences of telehealth-delivered physical activity in Australia where restricted access to health-care services is a longstanding problem. Collaborating researchers in Australia have developed a telehealth program (i-REBOUND- Let's get moving) which has been designed and tested in collaboration with end users, through a series of feasibility and pilot studies. The i-REBOUND program provides support for physical activity through physical exercises supervised by a physiotherapist and behavior change techniques for physical activity (i.e. individual counseling, information, recommendations, goal-setting, self-monitoring and structured follow-ups) across 6 months. The intervention is delivered to people post stroke or TIA in their own homes via video-meeting. This study, which is conducted in Sweden, aims to evaluate if the i-REBOUND program supported by a new mobile application could be delivered as intended through a pilot randomized controlled trial in order to determine the feasibility and preliminary effects in people post stroke or TIA living in urban and rural regions of Sweden.


Clinical Trial Description

In order to make the i-REBOUND program accessible to people post stroke or TIA across Sweden, a mobile application was developed in a co-design process with people post stroke or TIA, physiotherapists and stakeholders. The application enables monitoring and management of exercise (supervised online and prescribed exercise), communication through video calls and chat, self-monitoring of exercise compliance and physical activity, and scheduled digital surveys on function and health. The application will be used in this study to deliver the experimental and control intervention, but also for remote assessments of function and health (e.g. digital questionnaires). Study participants will be randomized to 1) an experimental group (n=60) receiving the mobile health version of the i-REBOUND program or 2) a control group (n=60) receiving behavioural change techniques for physical activity. The randomization schedule; 1:1, will be blocked and stratified by mobility status (independent/mobility device users) and geographical region (urban/rural areas). Recruitment: Participants will be recruited through a national network of clinical sites across Sweden, social media and patient organizations. Screening: Potential participants will be contacted via phone and verbal consent will be sought to provide further information. During this phone conversation, trial eligibility will be assessed according to the inclusion/exclusion criteria using a standardized checklist, including questions regarding cognitive functioning and the individual's usage of mobile applications. Sample size: The anticipated sample size of 60 participants per group (total 120) builds on the ambition to test the feasibility of the i-REBOUND program among people post stroke/TIA with variation in disability, age and sex, and geographical location within Sweden (i.e. cities and rural areas). Analysis: Outcomes of feasibility and safety (see primary outcomes) will primarily be analyzed using descriptive statistics in order to explore if the digital version of the i-REBOUND program could be delivered as intended. Preliminary effects of the intervention (see secondary outcomes) will be analyzed using a mixed-model analysis (or equivalent non-parametric statistics if the data is not normally distributed) to target differences in changes between the groups (experimental vs control) and time (baseline, and the 3, 6 and 12-months follow-up) on clinical outcomes. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05111951
Study type Interventional
Source Karolinska Institutet
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 1, 2021
Completion date December 22, 2023

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