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"InMotion" - Physical Training With Creative Movement as an Intervention for Adults With Schizophrenia

Ö

Örebro University, Sweden

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Schizophrenia and Related Disorders

Treatments

Other: Creative physical training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

InMotion is a randomized controlled study where adults with schizophrenia and schizophrenia-similar conditions, will be recruited to receive physical training with creative movements as an intervention, twice a week for a period of 12 weeks. The main outcome is changes in schizophrenia-related symptoms, secondary outcomes are changes in quality of life, physical and cognitive function, brain activity, and how the intervention is experienced by the participants.

Full description

Schizophrenia (SCZ) is among the world's top ten causes of long-term disability (World Health Organization, 2004). The major symptoms of SCZ include hallucinations, delusions, affective flattening, apathy and cognitive impairment. These symptoms lead to major problems in social and occupational functioning, and in self-care.

Our primary aim is to investigate the effects of 12-weeks of physical training with creative movement as an intervention given in addition to ongoing pharmacological treatment, in treating SCZ-symptoms compared to a control group. Secondary aim is to provide results regarding the effects of the intervention on (a) clinical symptom measures and quality of life, (b) levels of physical activity, physical function and measures of general health indicators, (a) clinical symptom measures and quality of life, (b) levels of physical activity, physical function and measures of general health indicators, (c) error detection and conflict resolution on the prefrontal cortex, memory and context processing (d) fluency of speak, and (e) emotional induction and regulation on specific emotions on the frontal cortex. Trough qualitative interviews, we will examine the participants' and their relative parties' experiences from taking part of the intervention and eventual experienced effects from it.

This study, called InMotion, is a prospective randomized controlled trial where the study participants will be randomized to 12-weeks of physical training with creative movement as an intervention in addition to standard care (intervention group) or to standard care alone (control group). The target group consists of adults with SCZ or SCZ-similar condition.

The intervention consists of organized training sessions in group, 2 times a week. The control group receives standard medical care and gets access to the intervention in digital form after the study has ended. The outcomes are measured at baseline, after 6 and 12 weeks, 6 months and 12 months. At all follow-ups, data are collected for both the intervention and control groups. The trial is being conducted in Örebro, Sweden. The study follows the standard methodology of intervention research.

60 patients with SCZ will be recruited continuously by staff at the psychiatry at the university hospital in Örebro. When matched to inclusion and exclusion criteria, written and informed consent will be obtained from all participants willing to participate. 30 patients will be randomized to participate in creative physical training in addition to continuing their conventional treatment plan (SCZ-I group) and 30 patients will be randomized to control group and receive treatment as usual (SCZ-C). Randomization to SCZ-I and SCZ-C groups will be done by sealed envelopes given to the participants after baseline measures.

The intervention covers various themes through three different parts (4 weeks per part). The intervention was developed by a team consisting of physiotherapists, dance teachers, a neuroscientist and a psychiatrist, with the aim to improve clinical symptoms, physical fitness, cognitive skills and emotion regulations. The intervention is further described in Table 1. The exercise is partly accompanied with calm music and recorded nature sounds and partly made in silence listening to one's own bodily rhythm. The exercise consists of tasks related to cardio and strength training, balance, conscious breathing, body awareness, mental imagery (nature visualizations), flexibility, emotional expression, and movement anticipation together with the facilitator and fellow participants. All the tasks are practiced during a flow of 45- to 60-minute exercise without any major breaks. Complexity and physical intensity of the tasks will gradually increase over the 12-week intervention period.

The duration of the biweekly creative movement intervention will be from 45 minutes (week 1 and 2) to 60 minutes (week 3-12), the order and content of which is described in detail in Table 1. Throughout the intervention period, the participants will be encouraged to practice their favorite movements or relaxation techniques at home if they want to. The participants will get recordings of the sessions from the intervention coordinators in the research team, if they want to have support in practicing on their own at home. If a participant misses a session, they will get a text-message and an email with the video again, and encouragement to practice at home to keep up the frequency of two sessions a week, and the instructor will ask them if they have done so to ensure that it is important and relevant with regularity.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Schizophrenia diagnosis or schizophrenia similar condition, age 18-65 years, performing physical activity less than 150 min/week.

Exclusion criteria

  • Current or recent history of substance abuse, bipolar disorder, severe autism, suicidal, severe physical illness, inability to read and understand the Swedish language and inability to interact with other people in a group.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Creative movement
Experimental group
Description:
The intervention will be performed as a group activity twice a week during a 12-week period. Each group will include 4-6 participants under the guidance of two instructors, and a related party if needed or wanted from the participant. The exercise is partly accompanied with calm music and recorded nature sounds and partly made in silence listening to one's own bodily rhythm. The exercise consists of tasks related to cardio and strength training, balance, conscious breathing, body awareness, mental imagery (nature visualizations), flexibility, emotional expression, and movement anticipation together with the facilitator and fellow participants. All the tasks are practiced during a flow of 45- to 60-minute exercise without any major breaks. Complexity and physical intensity of the tasks will gradually increase over the 12-week intervention period.
Treatment:
Other: Creative physical training
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
The control group receives standard medical care and gets access to the intervention in digital form after the study has ended.

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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