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Moving singing for lung health online in response to COVID-19: experience from a randomised controlled trial

Moving singing for lung health online in response to COVID-19: experience from a randomised controlled trial
Moving singing for lung health online in response to COVID-19: experience from a randomised controlled trial
Introduction: singing for lung health (SLH) is a popular arts-in-health activity for people with long-term respiratory conditions. Participants report biopsychosocial benefits, however, research on impact is limited. The ‘SLH: Improving Experiences of Lung Disease trial’, a randomised controlled, single (assessor) blind, trial of 12 weeks SLH versus usual care for people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (n=120) was setup to help to address this. The first group (n=18, nine singing and nine controls) started face-to-face (five sessions) before changing to online delivery (seven sessions) due to COVID-19-related physical distancing measures. As such, the experience of this group is here reported as a pilot study to inform further research in this area.

Methods: we conducted semistructured interviews and thematic analysis regarding barriers, facilitators and key considerations for transitioning from face-to-face to online delivery. Pilot quantitative outcomes include attendance, premeasures and postmeasures of quality of life and disease impact (Short Form 36 Health Survey, COPD Assessment Test score), breathlessness (Medical Research Council breathlessness scale, Dyspnoea-12), depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9, PHQ-9), anxiety (Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7), balance confidence (Activity specific Balance Confidence, ABC scale) and physical activity (clinical visit PROactive physical activity in COPD tool, combining subjective rating and actigraphy).

Results: attendance was 69% overall, (90% of the face-to-face sessions, 53% online sessions). Analysis of semistructured interviews identified three themes regarding participation in SLH delivered face to face and online, these where (1) perceived benefits; (2) digital barriers (online) and (3) digital facilitators (online). Findings were summarised into key considerations for optimising transitioning singing groups from face-to-face to online delivery. Pilot quantitative data suggested possible improvements in depression (treatment effect −4.78 PHQ-9 points, p<0.05, MCID 5) and balance confidence (treatment effect +17.21 ABC scale points, p=0.04, MCID 14.2).

Discussion: this study identifies key considerations regarding the adaptation of SLH from face-to-face to online delivery. Pilot data suggest online group singing for people with COPD may deliver benefits related to reducing depression and improved balance confidence.
2052-4439
Philip, Keir E. J.
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Lewis, Adam
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Jeffery, Edmund
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Buttery, Sara
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Cave, Phoene
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Cristiano, Daniele
b93e47c1-da1d-46c0-9be1-11be9cd07ef3
Lound, Adam
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Taylor, Karen
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Man, William D-C
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Fancourt, Daisy
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Polkey, Michael
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Hopkinson, Nicholas S.
91e9a2af-8ab3-4671-b766-761e82bd5310
Philip, Keir E. J.
6d7fc5a6-8385-4743-867f-346a2602040e
Lewis, Adam
71c83b66-d847-4aee-b716-b04d6de51450
Jeffery, Edmund
9875cac4-94c2-4851-bc4d-630d3cdd4b87
Buttery, Sara
a93f2fbc-4c73-4b9d-82c0-95a19a8b6aa0
Cave, Phoene
37cd6b00-7a8b-4001-b1ed-f949b6979231
Cristiano, Daniele
b93e47c1-da1d-46c0-9be1-11be9cd07ef3
Lound, Adam
8927c0fe-d5b9-48b9-9c31-3b110d71da65
Taylor, Karen
6c920c23-6757-439d-b600-b4b8cfd027a5
Man, William D-C
ef30a187-66e3-4781-b835-b034dbd1efda
Fancourt, Daisy
c2609458-943e-4c2e-a71f-ef79c0695ca9
Polkey, Michael
4f841dc9-9b94-4021-bbfc-64092cddc7b6
Hopkinson, Nicholas S.
91e9a2af-8ab3-4671-b766-761e82bd5310

Philip, Keir E. J., Lewis, Adam, Jeffery, Edmund, Buttery, Sara, Cave, Phoene, Cristiano, Daniele, Lound, Adam, Taylor, Karen, Man, William D-C, Fancourt, Daisy, Polkey, Michael and Hopkinson, Nicholas S. (2020) Moving singing for lung health online in response to COVID-19: experience from a randomised controlled trial. BMJ Open Respiratory Research, 7 (1). (doi:10.1136/BMJRESP-2020-000737).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: singing for lung health (SLH) is a popular arts-in-health activity for people with long-term respiratory conditions. Participants report biopsychosocial benefits, however, research on impact is limited. The ‘SLH: Improving Experiences of Lung Disease trial’, a randomised controlled, single (assessor) blind, trial of 12 weeks SLH versus usual care for people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (n=120) was setup to help to address this. The first group (n=18, nine singing and nine controls) started face-to-face (five sessions) before changing to online delivery (seven sessions) due to COVID-19-related physical distancing measures. As such, the experience of this group is here reported as a pilot study to inform further research in this area.

Methods: we conducted semistructured interviews and thematic analysis regarding barriers, facilitators and key considerations for transitioning from face-to-face to online delivery. Pilot quantitative outcomes include attendance, premeasures and postmeasures of quality of life and disease impact (Short Form 36 Health Survey, COPD Assessment Test score), breathlessness (Medical Research Council breathlessness scale, Dyspnoea-12), depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9, PHQ-9), anxiety (Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7), balance confidence (Activity specific Balance Confidence, ABC scale) and physical activity (clinical visit PROactive physical activity in COPD tool, combining subjective rating and actigraphy).

Results: attendance was 69% overall, (90% of the face-to-face sessions, 53% online sessions). Analysis of semistructured interviews identified three themes regarding participation in SLH delivered face to face and online, these where (1) perceived benefits; (2) digital barriers (online) and (3) digital facilitators (online). Findings were summarised into key considerations for optimising transitioning singing groups from face-to-face to online delivery. Pilot quantitative data suggested possible improvements in depression (treatment effect −4.78 PHQ-9 points, p<0.05, MCID 5) and balance confidence (treatment effect +17.21 ABC scale points, p=0.04, MCID 14.2).

Discussion: this study identifies key considerations regarding the adaptation of SLH from face-to-face to online delivery. Pilot data suggest online group singing for people with COPD may deliver benefits related to reducing depression and improved balance confidence.

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Accepted/In Press date: 21 October 2020
Published date: 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488893
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488893
ISSN: 2052-4439
PURE UUID: 13bdcf41-5bdf-4ffb-ac21-f338111afbba
ORCID for Adam Lewis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0576-8823

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Date deposited: 09 Apr 2024 16:31
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Keir E. J. Philip
Author: Adam Lewis ORCID iD
Author: Edmund Jeffery
Author: Sara Buttery
Author: Phoene Cave
Author: Daniele Cristiano
Author: Adam Lound
Author: Karen Taylor
Author: William D-C Man
Author: Daisy Fancourt
Author: Michael Polkey
Author: Nicholas S. Hopkinson

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