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SARS-CoV-2 is the coronavirus responsible for developing the disease known as COVID-19. Its evolution can range from an asymptomatic course, to rapidly evolve and cause an acute respiratory syndrome. In addition to respiratory symptoms, is also has an impact on the neuromuscular systems. Therefore, the additional inactivity for hospitalization, negatively influences the loss of muscular, cardiovascular and metabolic fitness. In view of this, it is recommended that early post-acute rehabilitation be continued after the hospital phase to increase levels of physical activity, which can also be continued with long-term telerehabilitation.
This project would offer a free service of asynchronous physical telerehabilitation for the patient that is easy to implement and follow up.
For this purpose, patients will be recruited at the time of discharge from the Hospital Provincial Nuestra Señora de Gracia (HPNSG) and the Hospital Royo Villanova (HRV) in Zaragoza and two intervention groups with the same physical therapy and educational programme will be carried out. The experimental group will be carried out by means of home telerehabilitation, while the control group will receive the programme in an explanatory booklet.
The main objective is to analyse the preliminary efficacy on physical fitness of a 12-week physical therapy and therapeutic education programme using asynchronous telerehabilitation in post-COVID-19 patients, and to compare its effects with patients who have undergone the same programme, but in a non-telematic format.
The secondary objective is to analyze the feasibility of a physical home-based asynchronous telerehabilitation programme in post-COVID-19 patients.
Hypothesis: the implementation of a 12-week programme of physical therapy and therapeutic education using asynchronous telerehabilitation software is feasible and preliminarily effective in increasing physical fitness as well as adherence to treatment, and in the improvement of psychosocial factors.
Full description
At the first phase, an observational study aims to investigate the physical and psychological status of patients after hospital discharge.
At the second phase, a feasibility pilot study with a single-blinded randomized clinical trial design with volunteer patients admitted to hospital and recruited at the time of discharge by COVID-19 will evaluate a physiotherapy programme. There will be an intervention group (asynchronous telerehabilitation at home) and a control group (home rehabilitation by means of an explanatory leaflet). The intervention will be carried out for 12 weeks with a follow-up at 3 and 6 months.
Intervention:
The physical rehabilitation programme will be designed with three levels of intensity of aerobic, strength and respiratory exercises, and a list of recommendations for self-management of the sequelae of the COVID-19.
The intervention will last for a total of 12 weeks at home (three days a week for 45-60 minutes a day) with a biweekly phone check-up.
All patients will be provided with the same physical rehabilitation and educational programme, with each allocation group differing in the format of the prescription.
Experimental group
A programme with exercise videos and health recommendations will be prescribed through a telerehabilitation platform to improve fatigue and fitness resulting from COVID-19. The application will be installed on patients' mobile phones and its use will be explained to them so that they can carry out the programme from their homes.
Control group The control group will receive a paper booklet with clear pictures and descriptions of the exercise and educative programme to improve fatigue and fitness.
Assessment:
Fatigue will be assessed with the fatigue severity scale (FSS). Functional capacity will be measured through operation: with the Post-COVID Functional Status Scale (PCFS), the strength with the 30" sit-to-stand (STST), the 30" arm curl test (ACT), and through aerobic capacity with de six minutes walking test (6MWT).
Psychosocial factors will be measured with the general self-efficacy scale (GSES), the depression and anxiety scale (DASS-21), the behavioral regulation questionnaire in sport (BRSQ) and the multidimensional scale of perceived social support (MSPSS).
Quality of life will be measured with the quality of life scale (SF-12).
Adherence and engagement be measured by diary recording and satisfaction with a brief interview.
Outcome measures:
Fatigue, functional status post-COVID-19, strength, aerobic capacity, anxiety and depression, behavior in sport, perceived social support and quality of life will be evaluated before intervention, after intervention (12 weeks) at 3 and 6 months for follow-up.
Adherence and satisfaction will be evaluated after intervention (12 weeks) and during intervention (each 15 days).
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50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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