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Effects of an mHealth brisk walking intervention on increasing physical activity in older people with cognitive frailty: pilot randomized controlled trial

Effects of an mHealth brisk walking intervention on increasing physical activity in older people with cognitive frailty: pilot randomized controlled trial
Effects of an mHealth brisk walking intervention on increasing physical activity in older people with cognitive frailty: pilot randomized controlled trial
Background: Cognitive frailty is the coexistence of physical frailty and cognitive impairment and is an at-risk state for many adverse health outcomes. Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) is protective against the progression of cognitive frailty. Physical inactivity is common in older people, and brisk walking is a feasible form of physical activity that can enhance their MVPA. Mobile health (mHealth) employing persuasive technology has been successful in increasing the levels of physical activity in older people. However, its feasibility and effects on older people with cognitive frailty are unclear. Objective: We aimed to identify the issues related to the feasibility of an mHealth intervention and the trial (ie, recruitment, retention, participation, and compliance) and to examine the effects of the intervention on cognitive function, physical frailty, walking time, and MVPA. Methods: An open-label, parallel design, randomized controlled trial (RCT) was employed. The eligibility criteria for the participants were age ≥60 years, having cognitive frailty, and having physical inactivity. In the intervention group, participants received both conventional behavior change intervention and mHealth (ie, smartphone-assisted program using Samsung Health and WhatsApp) interventions. In the control group, participants received conventional behavior change intervention only. The outcomes included cognitive function, frailty, walking time, and MVPA. Permuted block randomization in 1:1 ratio was used. The feasibility issue was described in terms of participant recruitment, retention, participation, and compliance. Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to test the within-group effects in both groups separately. Results: We recruited 99 participants; 33 eligible participants were randomized into either the intervention group (n=16) or the control (n=17) group. The median age was 71.0 years (IQR 9.0) and the majority of them were females (28/33, 85%). The recruitment rate was 33% (33/99), the participant retention rate was 91% (30/33), and the attendance rate of all the face-to-face sessions was 100% (33/33). The majority of the smartphone messages were read by the participants within 30 minutes (91/216, 42.1%). ActiGraph (58/66 days, 88%) and smartphone (54/56 days, 97%) wearing compliances were good. After the interventions, cognitive function improvement was significant in both the intervention (P=.003) and the control (P=.009) groups. The increase in frailty reduction (P=.005), walking time (P=.03), step count (P=.02), brisk walking time (P=.009), peak cadence (P=.003), and MVPA time (P=.02) were significant only in the intervention group. Conclusions: Our mHealth intervention is feasible for implementation in older people with cognitive impairment and is effective at enhancing compliance with the brisk walking training program delivered by the conventional behavior change interventions. We provide preliminary evidence that this mHealth intervention can increase MVPA time to an extent sufficient to yield clinical benefits (ie, reduction in cognitive frailty). A full-powered and assessor-blinded RCT should be employed in the future to warrant these effects.
Brisk walking, Cognitive frailty, Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, Older people, Smartphone
2291-5222
Kwan, Rick Y.C.
4ad03790-4557-41c1-8584-3313a4235e51
Lee, Deborah
ffe5d098-ae44-4001-8619-cae10fe35a3c
Lee, Paul H.
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
Tse, Mimi
5d902c2e-ce73-4192-ab5f-ad99457d5ea2
Cheung, Daphne S.K.
4d789122-86c7-4ecb-881c-af510f070ce4
Thiamwong, Ladda
537662ab-ee73-4875-9653-f2daf4b7290c
Choi, Kup Sze
c13c77a1-cf12-46b4-828f-d37c1435f0f8
Kwan, Rick Y.C.
4ad03790-4557-41c1-8584-3313a4235e51
Lee, Deborah
ffe5d098-ae44-4001-8619-cae10fe35a3c
Lee, Paul H.
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
Tse, Mimi
5d902c2e-ce73-4192-ab5f-ad99457d5ea2
Cheung, Daphne S.K.
4d789122-86c7-4ecb-881c-af510f070ce4
Thiamwong, Ladda
537662ab-ee73-4875-9653-f2daf4b7290c
Choi, Kup Sze
c13c77a1-cf12-46b4-828f-d37c1435f0f8

Kwan, Rick Y.C., Lee, Deborah, Lee, Paul H., Tse, Mimi, Cheung, Daphne S.K., Thiamwong, Ladda and Choi, Kup Sze (2020) Effects of an mHealth brisk walking intervention on increasing physical activity in older people with cognitive frailty: pilot randomized controlled trial. JMIR mHealth and uHealth, 8 (7), [16596]. (doi:10.2196/16596).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Cognitive frailty is the coexistence of physical frailty and cognitive impairment and is an at-risk state for many adverse health outcomes. Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) is protective against the progression of cognitive frailty. Physical inactivity is common in older people, and brisk walking is a feasible form of physical activity that can enhance their MVPA. Mobile health (mHealth) employing persuasive technology has been successful in increasing the levels of physical activity in older people. However, its feasibility and effects on older people with cognitive frailty are unclear. Objective: We aimed to identify the issues related to the feasibility of an mHealth intervention and the trial (ie, recruitment, retention, participation, and compliance) and to examine the effects of the intervention on cognitive function, physical frailty, walking time, and MVPA. Methods: An open-label, parallel design, randomized controlled trial (RCT) was employed. The eligibility criteria for the participants were age ≥60 years, having cognitive frailty, and having physical inactivity. In the intervention group, participants received both conventional behavior change intervention and mHealth (ie, smartphone-assisted program using Samsung Health and WhatsApp) interventions. In the control group, participants received conventional behavior change intervention only. The outcomes included cognitive function, frailty, walking time, and MVPA. Permuted block randomization in 1:1 ratio was used. The feasibility issue was described in terms of participant recruitment, retention, participation, and compliance. Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to test the within-group effects in both groups separately. Results: We recruited 99 participants; 33 eligible participants were randomized into either the intervention group (n=16) or the control (n=17) group. The median age was 71.0 years (IQR 9.0) and the majority of them were females (28/33, 85%). The recruitment rate was 33% (33/99), the participant retention rate was 91% (30/33), and the attendance rate of all the face-to-face sessions was 100% (33/33). The majority of the smartphone messages were read by the participants within 30 minutes (91/216, 42.1%). ActiGraph (58/66 days, 88%) and smartphone (54/56 days, 97%) wearing compliances were good. After the interventions, cognitive function improvement was significant in both the intervention (P=.003) and the control (P=.009) groups. The increase in frailty reduction (P=.005), walking time (P=.03), step count (P=.02), brisk walking time (P=.009), peak cadence (P=.003), and MVPA time (P=.02) were significant only in the intervention group. Conclusions: Our mHealth intervention is feasible for implementation in older people with cognitive impairment and is effective at enhancing compliance with the brisk walking training program delivered by the conventional behavior change interventions. We provide preliminary evidence that this mHealth intervention can increase MVPA time to an extent sufficient to yield clinical benefits (ie, reduction in cognitive frailty). A full-powered and assessor-blinded RCT should be employed in the future to warrant these effects.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 20 June 2020
Published date: 31 July 2020
Additional Information: Funding Information: This project is funded by the School of Nursing, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (BE08). We would like to thank our collaborators Mr. Gary Sham and Ms. Cathy Cheung from the Central and Western District Elderly Community Centre, St. James' Settlement, and Mr. Law from Jane Shu Tsao Neighborhood Elderly Centre, Hong Kong Mutual Encouragement Association Limited, for supporting this project by providing venues and for coordinating participant recruitment. Funding Information: This project is funded by the School of Nursing, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (BE08). We would like to thank our collaborators Mr. Gary Sham and Ms. Cathy Cheung from the Central and Western District Elderly Community Centre, St. James’ Settlement, and Mr. Law from Jane Shu Tsao Neighborhood Elderly Centre, Hong Kong Mutual Encouragement Association Limited, for supporting this project by providing venues and for coordinating participant recruitment. Publisher Copyright: © Rick YC Kwan, Deborah Lee, Paul H Lee, Mimi Tse, Daphne SK Cheung, Ladda Thiamwong, Kup-Sze Choi. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (http://mhealth.jmir.org), 31.07.2020. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Keywords: Brisk walking, Cognitive frailty, Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, Older people, Smartphone

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475045
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475045
ISSN: 2291-5222
PURE UUID: 694611ce-0d2d-4547-99bd-5654628a555a
ORCID for Paul H. Lee: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5729-6450

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Date deposited: 09 Mar 2023 18:47
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:08

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Contributors

Author: Rick Y.C. Kwan
Author: Deborah Lee
Author: Paul H. Lee ORCID iD
Author: Mimi Tse
Author: Daphne S.K. Cheung
Author: Ladda Thiamwong
Author: Kup Sze Choi

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