Feasibility of a Person-centred Digital Program Targeting Physical Activity in Spinal Stenosis Surgery
NCT05806593 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 29
Last updated 2024-12-18
Summary
Spinal stenosis is the most common cause of degenerative spinal surgery. The majority do not achieve the global recommendations for health-promoting physical activity before or after surgery. Patients with a low level of physical activity and a high degree of fear of movement are at an increased risk of poorer health outcomes after surgery. Increasing the number of steps per day is a way to increase physical activity, which in long term can lead to health benefits. In addition, a digital format is a way to increase the availability of physiotherapy to strive for equal rehabilitation.
The overall purpose of the research project is to improve health outcome and increase the availability of rehabilitation for patients at high risk of negative health outcomes after spinal surgery due to spinal stenosis through Get Back, a person-centered and digital program with a focus on physical activity.
Before conducting a large-scale study, the investigators want to conduct a study that aims to investigate and develop the Get Back program regarding content and dose, treatment fidelity as well as feasibility in terms of study procedure, compliance, and acceptability.
Approximately thirty patients with lumbar spinal stenosis and an identified risk profile for poorer postoperative outcomes will be recruited from two spine clinics in Sweden. The program involves meeting a physiotherapist digitally (through video call) approximately 1 week before surgery to formulate a person-centered health plan. The health plan is monitored and progressed by the physiotherapist by video until eleven weeks after surgery. The Get Back program includes 5 sessions (1 hour each) which are supplemented with 5 booster sessions (30 minutes) to reinforce the intervention. Get Back is based on three key components that run through all sessions. These are person-centeredness, behavioral medicine techniques to reduce fear of movement and worries about pain, as well as to optimize physical activity. The physiotherapist supports the participant's individual resources and abilities through validated behavioral medicine methods in combination with education/communication/knowledge support and behavior-strengthening tools (which are also used in-between sessions) to achieve the participant's personal goals linked to physical functioning, physical activity, and health. The program will be compared to standard physiotherapy.
Conditions
- Spinal Stenosis Lumbar
Interventions
- BEHAVIORAL
-
Get Back pilot
A health-promoting program, targeting physical activity behavior, with a person-centred approach led by a physiotherapist digitally during 12 weeks.
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
The Swedish Research Council
collaborator OTHER_GOV -
AFA Insurance
collaborator INDUSTRY -
Sophiahemmet University
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Mari K Lundberg · Sophiahemmet Högskola
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Masking
- SINGLE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2023-04-17
- Primary Completion
- 2024-11-04
- Completion
- 2024-11-04
Countries
- Sweden
Study Locations
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