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This single-arm proof-of-concept research study aims to assess the effect of a digital incentive spirometer (IS) device and a companion mobile-based app on incentive spirometry adherence in patients post-surgery. The digital IS utilizes a sensor to measure inspiratory breaths, and these data are transmitted wirelessly to a secure cloud database. The spirometer and app include a patient reminder system, exercise gamification strategies, progress tracking, and additional features designed to promote patient IS use.
Full description
Incentive spirometry is frequently prescribed as a standard-of-care for patients post-surgery to reduce the risk of developing postoperative pulmonary complications associated with atelectasis. An incentive spirometer (IS) is a mechanical breathing device that assists with pulmonary rehabilitation through improving lung expansion by encouraging deep breathing. While performing incentive spirometry exercises is effective at lowering atelectasis severity, ventilation time, and pulmonary complication rates, patient adherence to performing exercises is very poor. Medical staff, due to time constraints, often cannot supervise all of their patients' entire incentive spirometry regimens (usually every 10-15 min during wakeful hours), contributing to low adherence and incorrect exercise completion. This is compounded by current incentive spirometers lacking a method for accurately collecting patient exercise and adherence data. The present study seeks to evaluate the effect of a digital IS that provides instruction signals and exercise reminders on patients' incentive spirometry adherence.
This single-arm proof-of-concept research study aims to assess the effect of a digital incentive spirometer (IS) device and a companion mobile-based app on incentive spirometry adherence in patients post-surgery. The digital IS utilizes a sensor to measure inspiratory breaths, and these data are transmitted wirelessly to a secure cloud database. The spirometer and app include a patient reminder system, exercise gamification strategies, progress tracking, and additional features designed to promote patient IS use.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the effect of a digital IS that provides gentle auditory and haptic reminders and exercise guidance on patient adherence to incentive spirometry. Secondarily, this study will evaluate metrics relating to lung function to assess post-surgery lung recovery in patients using the digital IS.
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There are no exclusions based on economic status, gender, race, or ethnicity. An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:
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31 participants in 1 patient group
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Doraid Jarrar, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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