This research project aims to improve and promote physical activity participation in the outdoors and use outdoor walking as a form of long-term rehabilitation for young adults who have had a stroke. This research is specifically focused on adults of working age (e.g. 18 to 65 years classed as young adults) as there is little to no research or rehabilitation programmes for young adults who have had a stroke on how best to regain function and independence to return to social/leisure activities, employment and education. During this study, The investigators will measure how fast a young adult who has had a stroke walks, how much energy they use to walk and how their joints move when walking. The investigators will also use questionnaires to measure how confident a young adult who has had a stroke is and how they feel when outdoors. This project could highlight the positive role of exercising in outdoor natural environments to promote recovery following stroke in young adults. The investigators predict that an outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme could motivate the young stroke population to better engage in their rehabilitation, as walking in more challenging environments could facilitate an increase in the desire to walk outdoors and confidence.
This study is a randomised controlled trial, which will investigate whether an outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme can improve walking performance (how efficiently and how fast or slow an individual is able to walk) and quality of life of young adults who have had a stroke, compared to controls who have had a stroke, who will not be provided with the outdoor-walking programme. Forty-six individuals aged between 18 and 65 years, who have had a stroke in the last three years, will be recruited to participate in this study. Participants will be recruited from 3 health boards in Wales, United Kingdom: Aneurin Bevan University Health Board, Swansea Bay University Health Board and Cwm Taf University Health Board. For the development of the outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme, the Consensus for Exercise Reporting Template (CERT) was followed. The outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme will run over 3 months and take place in Wales, United Kingdom. Each week will include once-per-week, outdoor-walking instructor-led sessions. The walking routes planned for the rehabilitation programme will be detailed in an exercise diary provided to the participant. This will include information such as distance, terrain (e.g gravel, tarmac, grass), environment (e.g woodland, lowland, moorland), gradient (e.g uphill to downhill ratio, how steep/ flat) and perceived level of difficulty. The primary outcome measures for this study are walking speed and quality of life. Secondary outcomes include metabolic cost and biomechanical function. Outcomes will be measured pre and post 3-month rehabilitation data collection. Walking speed and metabolic cost will be measured during a 3-minute walking protocol. Quality of life will be measured using the standardised Stroke Aphasia Quality of Life (SAQOL), Confidence after stroke measure (CaSM) and Nature-relatedness scale (NR). Participants will also be asked to provide three difficulties they have experienced post-stroke (e.g difficulty walking) and three aims (e.g to go back to work) . Biomechanical function will involve analysing joint kinetic and kinematics and measured during the biomechanical function protocol. Adherence to the outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme will be measured pre, post-rehabilitation and follow-up through the use of the exercise diary and questionnaires. The results from this project will be used as benchmark data to provide evidence to support the role of outdoor rehabilitation in natural outdoor environments and green spaces for promoting health and wellbeing of young adults who have had a stroke.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
12
Participants in the intervention group will take part in an instructor led outdoor walking rehabilitation programme which will last for 3 months. Alongside this participants will also be asked to complete a home exercise programme.
Participants in the control group will be asked to keep to their normal activities of daily living, and given 10 targeted active stretches of the upper and lower body.
Cwm Taf Morgannwg university Health Board
Llantrisant, Rhondda Cynon Taff, United Kingdom
Aneurin Bevan University Health Board
Newport, South Wales, United Kingdom
Swansea Bay University Health Board
Swansea, South Wales, United Kingdom
Change in walking speed
Walking speed will be assessed by measuring the time to walk the middle 10m of a 15m walkway continuously for a total of 3-minutes. Scores are reported in meters/second with higher scores indicating better function. This will be recorded both indoors and outdoors and compared against the control.
Time frame: 5 months
Change in quality of life
Change in quality of life will be assessed using the standardised Stroke Aphasia Quality of Life (SAQOL) that represents a measure of quality of life and compared to the control. Score is reported numbers with higher score indicating better quality of life.
Time frame: 5 months
Change in confidence (sub-measure of quality of life)
Change in confidence will be assessed using the Confidence after stroke measure (CaSM), which is a comprehensive measure of confidence developed for use specifically after having a stroke and compared to the control. Score is reported numbers with higher score indicating better cpnfidence.
Time frame: 5 months
Change in nature-relatedness: attitudes to natural outdoor environments (sub-measure of quality of life)
Change in attitudes to natural outdoor environments will be assessed using the Nature-relatedness scale (NR), which assesses subjective connectedness with the natural environment. Scores will be compared to the control. Score is reported numbers with higher score indicating better attitudes towards natural outdoor environments.
Time frame: 5 months
Change in aims and difficulties (sub-measure of quality of life)
Change in quality of life will be further assessed by qualitative thematic analysis. This will involve asking participants to give three aims and three difficulties they have at the moment, which has been done in a previous study conducted by the research team to assess quality of life.
Time frame: 5 months
Change in metabolic cost (efficiency)
Metabolic cost will be measured during the 3-minute walking test. Participants will walk at their self-selected walking speed. This will be recorded indoors and compared against the control group. Metabolic cost will be calculated by measuring oxygen consumption and then dividing the value by walking speed. Score is reported in millilitres/kg/metre with lower score indicating better efficiency.
Time frame: 5 months
Change in biomechanical function (gait analysis)
Biomechanical function will involve analysing joint kinetic and kinematics during 7 walking trials on a 5m walkway. Changes in phases of the gait cycle (heel-strike, support, toe-off) will be compared pre and post rehabilitation, and control.
Time frame: 5 months
Adherence to the outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme
Adherence to the outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme will be measured pre, post-rehabilitation and follow-up using the outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme exercise diary and the following questionnaires; Stroke aphasia quality of life scale, confidence after stroke measure, nature-relatedness and three aims and difficulties. An improvement to all scores in the questionnaires will indicate high adherence to the outdoor-walking rehabilitation programme.
Time frame: 5 months
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