| Literature DB >> 27017890 |
Lisa A Simpson1,2, Janice J Eng2,3, May Chan2,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the feasibility of a phone-monitored home exercise program for the upper limb following stroke.Entities:
Keywords: Rehabilitation; stroke; telemedicine; upper limb
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27017890 PMCID: PMC5399812 DOI: 10.3109/09638288.2016.1162853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disabil Rehabil ISSN: 0963-8288 Impact factor: 3.033
Figure 1.Study design.
H-GRASP behavioural-change techniques.
| Protocol Features | Explanation | Behavioural Change Technique |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly monitoring | Therapists made weekly phone calls to participants to inquire about adherence to program, ascertain level of challenge and progress the program as needed | Prompt self-monitoring; prompt feedback on performance |
| Identify weekly task goals | Therapists and participants worked collaboratively to identify weekly task goals for increasing upper limb use during daily activities | Prompt goal setting |
| Monitoring completion of task goals | Therapists reviewed participants' experiences in completing weekly task goals | Prompt review of behavioural goals |
| Prompting % arm use each week | Therapists prompted participants to report the percent of time they were using their affected upper limb during daily activities | Prompt feedback on performance |
| Identify barriers and assist with problem solving | Therapists prompted participants to identify barriers to completing exercise targets and task goals. Assisted participants to problem solve solutions for overcoming barriers (ie. split sessions up into manageable time blocks, ensure a mix of challenging and less challenging task goals) | Prompt barrier identification |
| Encourage family/caregiver involvement | Participants were encouraged to invite caregivers to training session and be involved with exercise program and upper limb task goals | Prompt social support |
| Behavioural contract | At H-GRASP training session, participants were asked to sign a behavioural contract in which they agreed to adhere to exercise targets and attempt performance of task goals | Behavioural contract |
| Identify level of confidence | Participants were asked to identify their level of confidence to adhere to exercise targets. If confidence <8/10, therapist and participant discussed facilitators and barriers to adherence and problem solved strategies for overcoming barriers. | Prompt intention formation |
Behavioural change techniques were identified and attached to each protocol feature using behavioural technique codes and definitions from Michie et al.[14,39]
Feasibility outcomes.
| Feasibility indicator | Outcome | Criteria for success | Result | Success (Y/N) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recruitment Rate | % of individuals approached who were eligible and agreed to participate | 20% | 8/30 (26%) | Y |
| Retention Rate | % participants who completed 8 week H-GRASP intervention | >80% participants complete program | 6/8 (75%) | N |
| Perceived benefit | Exit questionnaire from participants who completed the program | >80% responses at least “4/5” | 6/6 (100%) | Y |
| Exercise Adherence Rates | % participants who achieved 360 minutes of average weekly exercise | >80% participants | 6/8 (75%) | N |
| Weekly Task Goal Adherence Rates | % participants who attempted ≥ 1 task goal each week | >80% participants | 6/8 (75%) | N |
| Therapist monitoring of participant goal tasks | Prompt participant to report status of task goals (i.e. attempted or not); | 80% of sessions | 49/52 (94%) | Y |
| Prompt participant to generate new task goals | 80% of sessions | 49/52 (94%) | Y | |
| Promoted feedback on performance | Prompted for weekly % use value | 80% of sessions | 48/52 (92%) | Y |
| Safety | # of participants with increased pain while performing exercises (as measured by visual analogue scale) | No participants with increased pain while performing exercises at week 8 | 0/6 | Y |
| Treatment Efficacy | Effect size of the primary and secondary outcomes | n/a | n/a | |
| CAHAI | n/a | 0.944 | n/a | |
| MAL | n/a | 0.789 | n/a | |
| Grip strength | n/a | 0.947 | n/a | |
| COPM | n/a | 0.789 | n/a | |
| % who get over the MCID | n/a | n/a | ||
| CAHAI | n/a | 33% | n/a | |
| MAL | n/a | 50% | n/a | |
| Grip strength | n/a | 33% | n/a | |
| COPM | n/a | 50% | n/a | |
CAHAI: Chedoke Arm and Hand Inventory; MAL: Motor Activity Log; COPM: Canadian Occupational Performance Measure; MCID: Minimally Clinical Important Difference. Note: the MCID values are: 7.1 points for CAHAI;[18] 1.0 point for MAL;[26] 5.0 kilos for grip strength [26] and 1.7 points for COPM.[27]
Figure 2:Participant flow diagram.
Participant characteristics.
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD; range) | 66.4 (7.8; 53–76) |
| Females, | 4 (50%) |
| Days Post Stroke, mean (SD; range) | 273.0 (64.2; 168–347) |
| Right Side Affected, | 7 (87.5%) |
| Dominant Side Affected, | 7 (87.5%) |
| Caregiver assistance with H-GRASP, | 2 (25%) |
| Grip Strength, | 10.5 (6.9; 3.8–24.3) |
| CAHAI, | 33.8 (12.8; 17–55) |
| MALQ, | 1.6 (0.7; 0.4–2.6) |
CAHAI: Chedoke Arm and Hand Activity Inventory (0–63); MALQ: Motor Activity Log Quality of Movement Scale (0–5).
Clinical outcomes and exercise minutes.
| Clinical Measures ( | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average weekly minutes ( | Mean (SD; range) | Initial | Baseline | Post H-GRASP | 3M Follow up | 6M Follow up |
| 472.2 (107.1; 295–592) | Grip Strength | 7.3 (2.9; 3.8–11.1) | 8.0 (2.8; 5.2–11.6) | 10.6 (3.6; 5.0–14.0) | 12.0 (3.8; 6.2–16.7) | 13.4 (3.7; 7.7–17.3) |
| CAHAI | 28.8 (9.8; 17–42) | 33.5 (13.7; 18–49) | 41.3 (18.4; 17–60) | 42.7 (18.1; 16–62) | 44.9 (18.3; 19–63) | |
| MALQ | 1.4 (0.6; 0.4–2.2) | 1.8 (0.7; 1.0–2.8) | 2.7 (1.1; 1.1–4.2) | 2.6 (0.9; 1.0–3.8) | 2.5 (1.0; 0.7–3.5) | |
| COPM | NA | 3.2 (1.8; 1.8–6.5) | 5.1 (2.2; 2.4–8.2) | NA | NA |
CAHAI: Chedoke Arm and Hand Inventory (0–63); MALQ: Motor Activity Log, Quality of Movement Scale (0–5); COPM: Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (1–10).
*Values are shown for individuals who completed the 8 week H-GRASP. One individual was excluded from the three month and six month assessments as he broke his wrist prior to the three month assessment date.
†Post-hoc Wilcoxon Signed Rank test revealed significant difference between baseline and Post H-GRASP scores (Grip Strength, p = 0.046; CAHAI, p = 0.046; MALQ, p = 0.03).
‡Post-hoc Wilcoxon Signed Rank test revealed significant difference between Post H-GRASP and 6M Follow up scores, p = 0.043.
§Wilcoxon Signed Rank test revealed significant difference between baseline and Post H-GRASP scores, p = 0.03.
COPM activities and scores by participant.
| Participant | Activities deemed important | Baseline COPM score | Post H-GRASP COPM score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Crocheting | 3.4 | 5.4 |
| Knitting | |||
| Using dustpan | |||
| Cutting food | |||
| Driving | |||
| 2 | Baking | 6.5 | 8.3 |
| Cutting meat | |||
| Slicing food | |||
| Playing cards/scrabble | |||
| 3 | Painting | 2.2 | 2.4 |
| Dressing | |||
| Weeding | |||
| Household tasks | |||
| Using computer | |||
| 4 | Feeding | 3.2 | 3.6 |
| Dressing | |||
| Using tools | |||
| Writing | |||
| Driving lawnmower | |||
| 5 | Using fork | 1.9 | 7.0 |
| Using fishing rod | |||
| Buttoning | |||
| Picking up grandchild | |||
| 6 | Styling hair | 1.8 | 3.7 |
| Cooking | |||
| Volunteering | |||
| Returning to work | |||
| Writing |
Figure 3:Participant outcome measure profiles. This graph displays clinical measure scores across the study period by participant. CAHAI: Chedoke Arm and Hand Inventory (0–63); MALQ: Motor Activity Log Quality of Movement Scale (0–5); Grip: Grip Strength; COPM: Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (1–10)