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Development, deployment and evaluation of digitally enabled, remote, supported rehabilitation for people with long COVID-19 (Living With COVID-19 Recovery): protocol for a mixed-methods study

Development, deployment and evaluation of digitally enabled, remote, supported rehabilitation for people with long COVID-19 (Living With COVID-19 Recovery): protocol for a mixed-methods study
Development, deployment and evaluation of digitally enabled, remote, supported rehabilitation for people with long COVID-19 (Living With COVID-19 Recovery): protocol for a mixed-methods study
Introduction: Long COVID-19 is a distressing, disabling and heterogeneous syndrome often causing severe functional impairment. Predominant symptoms include fatigue, cognitive impairment (‘brain fog’), breathlessness and anxiety or depression. These symptoms are amenable to rehabilitation delivered by skilled healthcare professionals, but COVID-19 has put severe strain on healthcare systems. This study aims to explore whether digitally enabled, remotely supported rehabilitation for people with long COVID-19 can enable healthcare systems to provide high quality care to large numbers of patients within the available resources. Specific objectives are to (1) develop and refine a digital health intervention (DHI) that supports patient assessment, monitoring and remote rehabilitation; (2) develop implementation models that support sustainable deployment at scale; (3) evaluate the impact of the DHI on recovery trajectories and (4) identify and mitigate health inequalities due to the digital divide.

Methods and analysis: Mixed-methods, theoretically informed, single-arm prospective study, combining methods drawn from engineering/computer science with those from biomedicine. There are four work packages (WP), one for each objective. WP1 focuses on identifying user requirements and iteratively developing the intervention to meet them; WP2 combines qualitative data from users with learning from implementation science and normalisation process theory, to promote adoption, scale-up, spread and sustainability of the intervention; WP3 uses quantitative demographic, clinical and resource use data collected by the DHI to determine illness trajectories and how these are affected by use of the DHI; while WP4 focuses on identifying and mitigating health inequalities and overarches the other three WPs.

Ethics and dissemination: Ethical approval obtained from East Midlands – Derby Research Ethics Committee (reference 288199). Our dissemination strategy targets three audiences: (1) Policy makers, Health service managers and clinicians responsible for delivering long COVID-19 services; (2) patients and the public; (3) academics.

Trial registration number: Research Registry number: researchregistry6173.
Anxiety, COVID-19/complications, Humans, Prospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2
2044-6055
Murray, Elizabeth
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Goodfellow, Henry
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Bindman, Julia
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Blandford, Ann
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Bradbury, Katherine
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Chaudhry, Tahreem
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Fernandez-Reyes, Delmiro
a5035b08-55c5-42a6-bf8d-b3b1e8b2bcc2
Gomes, Manuel
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Hamilton, Fiona L.
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Heightman, Melissa
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Henley, William
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Hurst, John R.
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Hylton, Hannah
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Linke, Stuart
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Pfeffer, Paul
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Ricketts, William
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Robson, Chris
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Singh, Richa
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Stevenson, Fiona A.
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Walker, Sarah
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Waywell, Jonathan
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Murray, Elizabeth
cb300780-9041-44af-9ae5-e13531eb23b8
Goodfellow, Henry
8d655992-8e49-451b-ab83-a57523694b32
Bindman, Julia
4ab7a996-61ff-4504-a1bb-33a4192205d9
Blandford, Ann
1a959d23-6ce2-41bd-89ea-b81b61ec5f7a
Bradbury, Katherine
87fce0b9-d9c5-42b4-b041-bffeb4430863
Chaudhry, Tahreem
0fd35f29-e42a-4551-9274-3b950c698994
Fernandez-Reyes, Delmiro
a5035b08-55c5-42a6-bf8d-b3b1e8b2bcc2
Gomes, Manuel
31e995b9-189c-40de-9664-df1f273fbf1c
Hamilton, Fiona L.
3ed5bd8f-5cbd-468e-bf0b-9886b87ad89e
Heightman, Melissa
70d531dd-edbd-496e-914d-dec4e347de59
Henley, William
d11c899d-24f5-401d-9c8a-a01cc381f050
Hurst, John R.
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Hylton, Hannah
00ee2a43-f2d3-42df-ad69-e2f7c4dc6756
Linke, Stuart
1c79b2cc-1e16-4b44-a104-d6b76154258f
Pfeffer, Paul
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Ricketts, William
f16390fa-ba59-4f6b-8d6c-43ac41de5c9d
Robson, Chris
52a364fa-3c5a-4690-b906-52dd4b7c5a64
Singh, Richa
a9866b8f-da98-40e0-8b19-c206a0142a21
Stevenson, Fiona A.
68366278-ef64-41e6-a7b2-099f1971ba8e
Walker, Sarah
0be802fe-56cc-4324-9cec-5ad6bd254f10
Waywell, Jonathan
aa865bb7-8931-4135-8195-dbf866c974a2

Murray, Elizabeth, Goodfellow, Henry, Bindman, Julia, Blandford, Ann, Bradbury, Katherine, Chaudhry, Tahreem, Fernandez-Reyes, Delmiro, Gomes, Manuel, Hamilton, Fiona L., Heightman, Melissa, Henley, William, Hurst, John R., Hylton, Hannah, Linke, Stuart, Pfeffer, Paul, Ricketts, William, Robson, Chris, Singh, Richa, Stevenson, Fiona A., Walker, Sarah and Waywell, Jonathan (2022) Development, deployment and evaluation of digitally enabled, remote, supported rehabilitation for people with long COVID-19 (Living With COVID-19 Recovery): protocol for a mixed-methods study. BMJ Open, 12 (2), [057408]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2021-057408).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: Long COVID-19 is a distressing, disabling and heterogeneous syndrome often causing severe functional impairment. Predominant symptoms include fatigue, cognitive impairment (‘brain fog’), breathlessness and anxiety or depression. These symptoms are amenable to rehabilitation delivered by skilled healthcare professionals, but COVID-19 has put severe strain on healthcare systems. This study aims to explore whether digitally enabled, remotely supported rehabilitation for people with long COVID-19 can enable healthcare systems to provide high quality care to large numbers of patients within the available resources. Specific objectives are to (1) develop and refine a digital health intervention (DHI) that supports patient assessment, monitoring and remote rehabilitation; (2) develop implementation models that support sustainable deployment at scale; (3) evaluate the impact of the DHI on recovery trajectories and (4) identify and mitigate health inequalities due to the digital divide.

Methods and analysis: Mixed-methods, theoretically informed, single-arm prospective study, combining methods drawn from engineering/computer science with those from biomedicine. There are four work packages (WP), one for each objective. WP1 focuses on identifying user requirements and iteratively developing the intervention to meet them; WP2 combines qualitative data from users with learning from implementation science and normalisation process theory, to promote adoption, scale-up, spread and sustainability of the intervention; WP3 uses quantitative demographic, clinical and resource use data collected by the DHI to determine illness trajectories and how these are affected by use of the DHI; while WP4 focuses on identifying and mitigating health inequalities and overarches the other three WPs.

Ethics and dissemination: Ethical approval obtained from East Midlands – Derby Research Ethics Committee (reference 288199). Our dissemination strategy targets three audiences: (1) Policy makers, Health service managers and clinicians responsible for delivering long COVID-19 services; (2) patients and the public; (3) academics.

Trial registration number: Research Registry number: researchregistry6173.

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Accepted/In Press date: 20 December 2021
Published date: 7 February 2022
Keywords: Anxiety, COVID-19/complications, Humans, Prospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 456375
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456375
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 147f4b2c-e286-4958-abfb-fbe42e32c0df
ORCID for Katherine Bradbury: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5513-7571

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Date deposited: 27 Apr 2022 15:21
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:14

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Contributors

Author: Elizabeth Murray
Author: Henry Goodfellow
Author: Julia Bindman
Author: Ann Blandford
Author: Tahreem Chaudhry
Author: Delmiro Fernandez-Reyes
Author: Manuel Gomes
Author: Fiona L. Hamilton
Author: Melissa Heightman
Author: William Henley
Author: John R. Hurst
Author: Hannah Hylton
Author: Stuart Linke
Author: Paul Pfeffer
Author: William Ricketts
Author: Chris Robson
Author: Richa Singh
Author: Fiona A. Stevenson
Author: Sarah Walker
Author: Jonathan Waywell

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