| Literature DB >> 27965808 |
Cam Clayton1, Lynne Feehan2, Charlie H Goldsmith3, William C Miller4, Navi Grewal5, Joanna Ye5, Ju Young Yoo5, Linda C Li1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physical activity (PA) reduces pain and improves functioning in people with knee osteoarthritis (OA), but few people with the condition meet recommended PA guidelines. Successful intervention strategies to increase PA include goal setting, action planning, self-monitoring, and follow-up feedback from a healthcare professional. Recently developed consumer wearable activity trackers allow users to set activity goals, self-monitor daily goal-progress, and provide feedback on goal attainment. It is hypothesized that a multi-component physiotherapist-led intervention that includes a short (40-min) education module, guided goal-setting and action planning, the use of a wristband activity tracker, and weekly follow-up phone calls will lead to increased PA outcomes. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Activity counseling; Feasibility; Knee osteoarthritis; Physical activity; Wearable activity tracker
Year: 2015 PMID: 27965808 PMCID: PMC5153859 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-015-0027-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Fig. 1TRACK-OA study flowchart. Acronyms: PA physical activity, PT physiotherapist, MVPA moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, KOOS Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score, PIH Partners in Health Scale
An example of applying the PAR-Q to determine eligibility for the randomized controlled trial
| PAR-Q questions | Action |
|---|---|
| General health section | |
| 6. Do you currently have (or have had within the past 12 months) a bone, joint, or soft tissue problem that could be made worse by becoming more physically active? | If “yes” due ONLY to knee OA, answer follow-up questions 1a and 1b of PAR-Q |
| If “yes” due to other problems, complete entire follow-up section | |
| Follow-up section | |
| 1a. Do you have difficulty controlling your condition with medications or other physician-prescribed therapies? | If “yes”, the person will require physician clearance |
| If “no”, the person passes this criterion | |
| 1b. Do you have joint problems causing pain, recent fracture or fracture caused by osteoporosis or cancer, displaced vertebra, and/or spondylolysis/pars defect? | If “yes” ONLY to knee OA causing pain, then ask clarifying questions below |
| If “yes” to other conditions, the person will require physician clearance | |
| Clarifying questions | |
| 1. How severe are your symptoms after physical activity? | If mild symptoms for <2 h, no physician clearance necessary |
| 2. After physical activity, do your symptoms last longer than 2 h? | Otherwise, require physician clearance |
Feasibility data to be collected and criteria for success
| Feasibility data category | Item of interest | Success criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Process | Recruitment rate | 2 participants/week |
| Consent rate | ≥90 % | |
| Dropout rate | ≤10 % | |
| Adherence to protocols | 4 days × 20 h for each SenseWear week; 100 % completion of online questionnaires; mean 5 days/week of Fitbit use | |
| Resources | Equipment loss/reliability | 100 % equipment retention |
| Personnel | Sufficient personnel to execute the trial efficiently | |
| Management | Location, logistics, personnel, data | No criteria set |
| Scientific | Intervention effect, variation, safety | No criteria set |
Fig. 2TRACK-OA randomization diagram. T1 data collection occurs during week 5; T2 data collection during week 10