| Literature DB >> 35666562 |
Aurora James-Palmer1, Ellen Zambo Anderson1, Jean-Francois Daneault1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The popularity of yoga and the understanding of its potential health benefits have recently increased. Unfortunately, not everyone can easily engage in in-person yoga classes. Over the past decade, the use of remotely delivered yoga has increased in real-world applications. However, the state of the related scientific literature is unclear.Entities:
Keywords: complementary therapies; eHealth; mind-body; remote delivery; technology; telerehabilitation; yoga
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35666562 PMCID: PMC9210204 DOI: 10.2196/29092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 7.076
Data extracted from selected articles (scoping review; information extracted from each selected article and examples).
| Content area and extracted information | Examples | ||
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| Study type as defined by the study authors in the introduction or methods sections | Randomized controlled trial; single-group study | |
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| Country in which the study was conducted | United States | |
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| Comparison group used as described by the study authors (if applicable) | Regular activity control group; active control group such as a strengthening program | |
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| Number of participants (total [N] and per group [n]) | N=50 | |
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| Description of population, including defining characteristics such as the health condition, as described by the study authors | Women with depression | |
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| Mean age of the participants and SD (if provided) for the total sample and each group | Mean age of the total sample was 55.07 (SD 9.69) years | |
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| Sex distribution of participants in the total sample and in each group | Number of women in the study out of the total number of participants | |
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| Justification of delivery method in relation to the study population, as described by the study authors (ie, did the study authors describe why they delivered the intervention remotely, and if they did, what was the reason) | Yes—the study authors reported that individuals with cancer often have transportation and scheduling challenges that make it difficult to attend in-person appointments; no—the study authors did not describe why they chose remote delivery | |
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| Intervention setting | Home | |
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| Whether delivery was synchronous or asynchronous; delivery was considered synchronous if interventions were delivered in real time such that the instructor could interact with the participant or participants; delivery was considered asynchronous if intervention materials were prerecorded and could be accessed at any time | Synchronous (videoconferencing) and asynchronous (prerecorded video) | |
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| The technology used to deliver the intervention | Name of a specific videoconferencing platform; type of prerecorded video (ie, DVD) | |
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| Whether delivery was group or individual; it was considered group delivery if multiple people participated in the yoga intervention together at one time; it was considered individual delivery if a participant engaged in the intervention alone | If each participant received access to a prerecorded video and watched the video on their own (individual delivery) | |
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| Whether participants had additional interactions with the study team outside of assessment sessions and prescribed intervention sessions | Participants received an in-person introduction yoga class before starting the intervention period | |
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| Whether participants received supplementary materials | Participants received written instructions providing additional information on how to practice yoga | |
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| Style of yoga implemented | Hatha yoga or Iyengar yoga | |
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| Specific limbs of yoga implemented | Breathing; postures; meditation; relaxation | |
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| Yoga instructor credentials, as reported by the study authors, including instructor training (ie, are they a yoga instructor, yoga therapist, or other health care professional) and their certification training hours | Yoga instructor (200 hours) | |
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| Yoga dose: frequency and duration reported in minutes per session, sessions per week, and total number of weeks | 30 minutes per session with 2 sessions per week for 6 weeks | |
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| Whether the yoga sequences were designed, adapted, or selected for the specific study population, as described by the study authors, or whether this was not reported | Yes—the study authors reported that they designed the prerecorded videos specifically for the population enrolled in the study; no—the study authors did not report whether the yoga intervention was designed for the study population | |
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| Information about additional home practice (ie, did the study authors describe whether participants were encouraged to engage in additional practice outside of the prescribed intervention and how this was kept track of) | Yes—although the study authors required participants to watch the yoga video 1 time per week, the study authors encouraged participants to view the yoga video an additional 2 to 3 times per week if possible and asked them to log how often they did this | |
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| Study adherence (ie, did participants complete the study overall, including the intervention period and assessment sessions) reported as how many people in each group completed the study | 66% (44/67) of the yoga group completed the study | |
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| Intervention adherence (ie, did participants complete the intended yoga intervention dose); intervention adherence was reported as it was reported in each study; some studies reported it as the mean yoga practice, whereas others set a threshold or benchmark and reported intervention adherence as it related to the benchmark | Mean yoga practice was 44 min/week and the prescribed dose was 60 min/week; the benchmark for “good adherence” was participants who practiced yoga ≥6 times over 2 weeks, and 55% (37/67) of the yoga group met this benchmark | |
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| The presence or absence of technological challenges, as described by the study authors | Participants experienced technological challenges in 77% (24/31) of the sessions | |
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| The presence or absence of adverse events, as reported by the study authors for each study group, or whether the study authors did not report any information about adverse events | No adverse events occurred, the study did not report information about adverse events; 9 mild adverse events occurred in the yoga group and 4 mild adverse events occurred in the comparison group | |
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| The outcome measures were categorized into patient-reported outcome measures, physical performance and function outcome measures, and physiological outcome measures based on what the measures assessed; subsequently, a summary of results for these outcomes was extracted (eg, were there significant improvements between groups and significant improvements within groups) | The patient-reported outcome measure—the Beck Depression Inventory—showed significant within-group improvements | |
Figure 1Illustration showing the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flow diagram of the search, screening, and full-article review results.
General study information, including the first author, type, country, study groups, and results of the quality appraisal assessment.a
| Author, study type, and country | Study groups | Selection bias | Study | Confounders | Blinding | Data collection methods | Withdrawals or dropouts | Global ratingb |
| Armstrong et al [ | Yoga video vs regular activity | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak |
| Awdish et al [ | Yoga video; no comparison | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | Strong | Weak | Weak |
| Donesky et al [ | Yoga via videoconferencing vs health education phone call | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Strong | Moderate | Weak |
| Gunda et al [ | Yoga DVD; control not clearly described | Moderate | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak | Moderate | Weak |
| Huberty et al [ | Web-based yoga videos vs wait-list control | Moderate | Strong | Strong | Weak | Strong | Strong | Moderate |
| Huberty et al [ | Web-based yoga videos (2 doses) vs stretch and tone control | Moderate | Strong | Moderate | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Moderate |
| Jasti et al [ | Tele-yoga module | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Weak | Strong | Weak | Weak |
| Kyeongra et al [ | Yoga DVD vs in-person yoga | Strong | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Strong | Moderate | Moderate |
| Mullur et al [ | Yoga DVD vs handouts about yoga | Moderate | Weak | Strong | Weak | Moderate | Moderate | Weak |
| Sakuma et al [ | Yoga DVD vs regular activities | Moderate | Strong | Strong | Weak | Strong | Weak | Weak |
| Schuver et al [ | Yoga DVD vs DVD on walking | Moderate | Strong | Strong | Moderate | Strong | Moderate | Moderate |
| Stan et al [ | Yoga DVD vs DVD on strengthening | Moderate | Strong | Moderate | Weak | Strong | Moderate | Moderate |
aThe quality appraisal assessment was completed using the Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies with six domains contributing to the score: (1) selection bias, (2) study design, (3) confounders, (4) blinding, (5) data collection methods, and (6) withdrawals and dropouts.
bGlobal ratings were determined as follows: no weak ratings=strong, one weak rating=moderate, and ≥2 weak ratings=weak.
cRCT: randomized controlled trial.
Characteristics of the participants included in the reviewed studies.
| Study | Population | Number of Participants | Age (years), mean (SD) | Sex, n (%) | |||||||||||
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| Total | Yoga | Control | Total | Yoga | Control | Total | Yoga | Control | |||||
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| Female | Male | Female | Male | Female | Male | ||
| Armstrong et al [ | Adult women | 30 | 15 | 15 | 55.07 (9.69) | 54 (10) | 55 (9) | 30 (100) | 0 (0) | 15 (100) | 0 (0) | 15 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
| Awdish et al [ | Women with pulmonary hypertension and additional chronic health conditions | 3 | 3 | N/Aa | 48, 32, and 24 | 48, 32, and 24 | N/A | 3 (100) | 0 (0) | 3 (100) | 0 (0) | N/A | N/A | ||
| Donesky et al [ | Adults with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and heart failure | 15 | 7 | 8 | 71 (8.5) | 73 (14.3) | 70.5 (2.7) | 10 (66) | 5 (33) | 4 (57) | 3 (43) | 6 (75) | 2 (25) | ||
| Gunda et al [ | Adults with neurocardiogenic syncope | 44 | 21 | 23 | 21 (3) | 21 (3) | 22 (3) | 41 (93) | 3 (7) | 20 (95) | 1 (5) | 21 (91) | 2 (9) | ||
| Huberty et al [ | Adults with myeloproliferative neoplasm | 48 | 27 | 21 | 56.9 (10.3) | 58.3 (9.3) | 55.0 (11.4) | 45 (94) | 38 (6) | 25 (93) | 2 (7) | 20 (95) | 1 (5) | ||
| Huberty et al [ | Women who have experienced stillbirth | 90 | 30 (YLDb) and 30 (YMDc) | 30 | NSd | NS | NS | 90 (100) | 0 (0) | 30 (100; YLD) and 30 (100; YMD) | 0 (0) | 30 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
| Jasti et al [ | General adult public | 95 | 95 | N/A | 40.39 (13.33) | 40.39 (13.33) | N/A | 69 (73) | 26 (27) | 69 (73) | 26 (27) | N/A | N/A | ||
| Kyeongra et al [ | Sedentary adults who are overweight | 14 | 7 | 7 | 58.6 (5.4) | 58.7 (4.1) | 58.4 (6.8) | 12 (86) | 2 (14) | 6 (86) | 1 (14) | 6 (86) | 1 (14) | ||
| Mullur et al [ | Veterans with CKDe and diabetes | 10 | 5 | 5 | 64.4 (NS) | 60 (10.34) | 68.8 (5.97) | 1 (10) | 9 (90) | 1 (20) | 4 (80) | 0 (0) | 5 (100) | ||
| Sakuma et al [ | Female childcare workers | 98 | 67 | 31 | 33.6 (NS) | 32.6 (11.5) | 35.8 (13.0) | 98 (100) | 0 (0) | 67 (100) | 0 (0) | 31 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
| Schuver et al [ | Women with a history or diagnosis of depression | 40 | 20 | 20 | 42.68 (4.95) | 45.55 (12.30) | 39.8 (11.23) | 40 (100) | 0 (0) | 20 (100) | 0 (0) | 20 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
| Stan et al [ | Women with early-stage breast cancer and cancer-related fatigue | 34 | 18 | 16 | 62.1 (8.1) | 61.4 (7.0) | 63.0 (9.3) | 34 (100) | 0 (0) | 18 (100) | 0 (0) | 16 (100) | 0 (0) | ||
aN/A: not applicable.
bYLD: yoga low dose (60 min/week).
cYMD: yoga moderate dose (150 min/week).
dNS: not specified.
eCKD: chronic kidney disease.
Information about intervention characteristics.a
| Study | Asynchronous vs synchronous | Technology | Group vs individual | Yoga style | Yoga limbs | Duration (minutes per session) | Sessions per week | Number of weeks |
| Armstrong et al [ | Asynchronous | Video (type unspecified) | Individual | NSb | Breathing, postures, and relaxation | 30 | 4 | 10 |
| Awdish et al [ | Asynchronous | DVD and mobile app | Individual | Hatha and Iyengar | Breathing, postures, and meditation | NS | 3 to 6 | 8 |
| Donesky et al [ | Synchronous | Videoconference | Group | Iyengar | Breathing, postures, meditation, and relaxation | 60 | 2 | 8 |
| Gunda et al [ | Asynchronous | DVD | Individual | NS | Breathing, postures, and relaxation | 60 | 3 | 12 |
| Huberty et al [ | Asynchronous | Web-based videos | Individual | Hatha and Vinyasa | Breathing, postures, and meditation | Requested 60 min/week | Requested 60 min/week | 12 |
| Huberty et al [ | Asynchronous | Web-based videos | Individual | Gentle Hatha | Postures and meditation | 60 min week (LDc); 150 min/week (HDd) | 60 min/week (LD); 150 min/week (HD) | 12 |
| Jasti et al [ | Asynchronous and synchronous | Unspecified tele-yoga | NS | NS | Breathing and postures | 40 | ≥1 | 4 |
| Kyeongra et al [ | Asynchronous | DVD | Individual | Vinyasa | Breathing and postures | Required one 90-minute session, encouraged 2 more for “home practice” | Required one 90-minute session, encouraged 2 more for “home practice” | 8 |
| Mullur et al [ | Asynchronous | DVD | Individual | NS | Breathing and postures | 10 | As often as possible | 12 |
| Sakuma et al [ | Asynchronous | DVD | Individual | NS | Breathing and postures | 7.5 | Daily | 2 |
| Schuver et al [ | Asynchronous | DVD | Individual | Gentle Hatha | Breathing, postures, and meditation | 60 to 75 | 2 | 12 |
| Stan et al [ | Asynchronous | DVD | Individual | NS | Breathing and postures | 90 | 3 to 5 | 12 |
aInformation about the intervention characteristics such as the delivery method, including whether the intervention was delivered synchronously or asynchronously; the type of technology used; whether the intervention was delivered to a group or individual; and yoga intervention components, including the yoga style, yoga limbs, and intervention dose (frequency and duration).
bNS: not specified.
cLD: low dose.
dHD: high dose.
Outcome measures assessed in each study.
| Study and type | Comparison | Outcomes |
| Armstrong et al [ | Yoga video vs regular activity |
Sit and reach testb Trunk extensionb Trunk flexion Shoulder extension Shoulder flexionb Left ankle flexibilityb Right ankle flexibilityb |
| Awdish et al [ | Yoga video; no comparison |
Subjective changes via journalingc Health Promoting Lifestyle Profile 2c 6-minute walk testc Oxygen saturationc |
| Donesky et al [ | Yoga via videoconferencing vs health education phone call |
Safety: see the Adverse Events and Safety section Acceptability: see the Intervention Adherence section Technical issues: see the Patient-Reported Outcome Measures section Upper and lower body muscle strength 6-minute walk test Symptoms following the 6-minute walk testb Quality of life: St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire and Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaired Depression Personal Health Questionnaire-8 Overall dyspnea: Dyspnea-12 questionnaire General Sleep Disturbance Scale |
| Gunda et al [ | Yoga DVD; control not clearly described |
Log of the number of presyncope and syncope events: in the intervention group, for those who finished the yoga regimen, there was a statistically significant improvement in the number of episodes of syncope and presyncope SFSQe: statistically significant decrease in the mean SFSQ score from the control phase to completion of the intervention phase Head-up tilt table: resting heart rate Blood pressure |
| Huberty et al [ | Web-based yoga videos vs wait-list control |
Yoga participation: see the Intervention Adherence section Adverse events: see the Adverse Events and Safety section Blood draw feasibility and practicality Inflammatory biomarkersc Fatigue: single item from the multifactor MPN-SAFc,f Multifactor MPN-SAF: total symptom scorec Quality of life: single item from the NIHg PROMISh Global Health measurec Sleep disturbance: Sleep Disturbance Scale Short Form 8ac Pain intensity: Pain Intensity Short Form 3ac Anxiety distress: Emotional Anxiety Short Form 8ac Depression emotional Distress: Depression Short Form 8ac Mental health: PROMISc Sexual function: 8-item for men; 10-item for womenc Physical health: PROMISc |
| Huberty et al [ | Web-based yoga videos, including 2 different doses vs stretch and tone control |
Adherence: see the Intervention Adherence section Acceptability: all groups achieved satisfaction benchmarks Adverse events: see the Adverse Events and Safety section Demand: no group met the demand benchmark Impact of Event Scale State-trait Anxiety Inventory Patient Health Questionnaire-9i Perinatal Grief Scalei Self-Compassion Scalei Self-rated health (Short Form-12)i: a significant decrease in low-dose and control groups Emotion Regulation Questionnaire Mindful Attention Awareness Scale Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index |
| Jasti et al [ | Tele-yoga module |
Adherence: see the Intervention Adherence section Difficulty rating: mean score indicated that the yoga module was easy to practice Feasibility: 92.6% of participants found the yoga to be safe and feasible Yoga Performance Assessment scaled Perceived Stress Scaled |
| Kyeongra et al [ | Yoga DVD vs in-person yoga |
Adherence: see the Intervention Adherence section Modifiable Activity Questionnaire Program satisfaction: see the Patient-Reported Outcome Measures section |
| Mullur et al [ | Yoga DVD vs handout about yoga |
Capillary blood glucoseb Heart rateb Diastolic blood pressureb Hemoglobin A1c Systolic blood pressure Weight BMI |
| Sakuma et al [ | Yoga DVD vs regular activities |
Measure of body pain according to the Visual Analog Scale (range 0-100)j Japanese version of the General Health Questionnaire Body weight BMI Flexibility (measure not described reported in comparator) Grip strength Functional reach test |
| Schuver et al [ | Yoga DVD vs walking DVD |
Beck Depression Inventoryd Ruminative Responses Scalek |
| Stan et al [ | DVD vs strengthening DVD |
Feasibility: see the Intervention Adherence section Safety: see the Adverse Events and Safety section Fatigue: Multidimensional Fatigue Symptom Intervention Short Formd Quality of life: Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies–Breastd |
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
bStatistically significant between-group difference favoring the remote-delivered yoga group.
cOnly effect sizes were calculated.
dStatistically significant within-group differences.
eSFSQ: Syncope Functional Status Questionnaire.
fMPN-SAF: Myeloproliferative Neoplasm Symptom Assessment Form.
gNIH: National Institutes of Health.
hPROMIS: Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System.
iStatistically significant improvements in the yoga group compared with the control group. Yoga comprised 2 different yoga intervention doses. For further details, refer to the study by Huberty et al [23].
jStatistically significant improvement for individuals who demonstrated good adherence to the yoga group (≥6 times per 2 weeks) for low back pain, upper arm or neck pain, and menstrual pain.
kStatistically significant between-group difference when controlling for baseline levels.