This is a randomized trial of home-based exercises versus control for older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic. The hypothesis is that participation in a home-based program will reduce the risk of adverse effects of physical distancing by decreasing patient-reported disability, improving mental health and avoiding hospitalization or institutionalization for vulnerable older people
Background:More than 6.5 million Canadians are \> 65 years of age. Over half of older Canadians live with multiple comorbidities, leaving them at high risk of adverse outcomes of COVID-19. Social isolation and physical distancing orders are especially important to protect the health of this high-risk population. Vulnerable older Canadians are also at high risk of physical and mental health deterioration caused by the physical distancing meant to protect them from COVID-19. Effective management of the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences will require evidence-based strategies to support isolated vulnerable older Canadians. Exercise interventions can reduce the adverse health effects of social isolation and demonstrate larger effect sizes in older people with comorbidities. However, no exercise interventions have been tested in an acute isolation scenario such as the COVID-19 pandemic, which also requires that exercise interventions be home-based and remotely supported, presenting unique challenges to participation and adherence. Our team is uniquely positioned re-orient proven and robust programming, supported by a national network of investigators and existing infrastructure. We can immediately launch a large-scale trial to test the effectiveness of a remotely supported home exercise program (designed in partnership with vulnerable older Canadians) to mitigate the negative consequences of physical distancing to keep older Canadians healthy and safe from COVID-19. We hypothesize that participation in the PREPARE program will decrease the individual, health system and population health impacts of COVID19 induced physical distancing and social isolation. Research aims:Estimate the effectiveness of a remotely supported, home-based multimodal exercise program for older people with multiple comorbidities to improve our primary outcome: patient-reported disability 90-days after enrollment; secondary outcomes: patient-centered (depression, anxiety, quality of life, frailty, survival, 1-year disability scores, COVID19 severity) and system-relevant (admissions, emergency visits, institutionalization, costs, cost-effectiveness). Methods: Design, setting and participants: Parallel-arm multicenter randomized controlled trial at 3 Canadian hospitals. People \>65 years old recently discharged home with \>2 comorbidities will be included. Intervention: Three month supported home-based exercise program with demonstrated efficacy, feasibility and acceptability for vulnerable older people. Outcomes and sample size: We will have 90% power to detect a clinically important difference of in our primary outcome (validated WHODAS tool, 90-days post-enrollment) with 372 participants (186/arm)
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
372
A home-based exercise program guided by paper materials, weekly phone calls, and a DVD. Exercise will be prescribed as one-hour sessions, performed a minimum of three times per week for at least three months, consisting of: 1) strength training; 2) aerobic exercise and 3) flexibility.
Patient-reported disability 90 days after enrollment
The World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 (WHODAS) will be used . It is a patient-reported disability scale that assesses limitations in six major life domains - cognition, mobility, self-care, social interaction, life activities and participation in society. Participants will report if they have had no difficulty, mild difficulty, moderate difficulty, severe difficulty or extreme difficulty (simply cannot do) with the items listed.
Time frame: Assessing change in score from baseline data collection to 90 days from enrollment
Mental Health
The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 item (PHQ-9) and the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item (GAD-7) are validated tools for diagnosing anxiety and depression.
Time frame: Assessing change in the participants GAD-7 score from baseline to monthly scores for 12 months.
Function
Step count using pedometer
Time frame: Monthly step count from enrollment to monthly step counts for 12 months from enrollment.
Health-related quality of life
The EQ-5D-5L is a validated instrument with Canadian valuation statistics and national use, which informs incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year gained.
Time frame: Assessing change in the participants EQ-5D-5L score from baseline to monthly scores for 12 months.
Frailty
The Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) provides a global assessment of frailty.
Time frame: Assessing change in the participants CFS score from baseline to monthly scores for 12 months.
All-cause mortality.
All deaths and death dates will be identified via chart review or telephone call.
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Time frame: From enrollment to 12 months after enrollment.
Health System - Emergency Department Visits
Time frame: Monthly for 12 months following enrollment.
Health System - Re-admission
Time frame: Monthly for 12 months following enrollment.
Health System - Transfer to Long-Term Care
Time frame: Monthly for 12 months following enrollment.
COVID-19 test results
Time frame: Monthly for 12 months following enrollment.
Safety [Adverse Events]
Falls, cardiac or respiratory complications and unplanned healthcare encounters will be collected during the exercise treatment period for the exercise group. For the control group, participants will be asked if they experienced any falls since the time of enrollment up until the day before surgery. Unplanned healthcare encounters will also be collected during the time of enrollment to the final day of the exercise intervention for the intervention group through chart review.
Time frame: Assessing frequency of, or change in any safety events from enrollment up to 90 days from enrollment between the exercise group and control group.