The Impact of Covid-19 on Cardiac Rehabilitation Participants and Staff

NCT ID: NCT04740489

Last Updated: 2021-02-05

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Total Enrollment

30 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2021-02-01

Study Completion Date

2022-06-01

Brief Summary

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What are the experiences of staff and participants in phase 3 cardiac rehabilitation during the Covid-19 pandemic, and what impacts have adapted delivery had on participants' physical activity levels, mental health and well-being?

Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is a vital service for individuals diagnosed and treated for cardiovascular disease (e.g., heart attack, angina, valve disease). The service helps to improve recovery rates through supporting patients with beneficial lifestyle changes (e.g., physical activity, healthy eating), and coping with emotional distress following a traumatic cardiac event. The environment in which CR is being delivered has changed in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, including remote working practices, and in some instances postponing of rehabilitation. Despite the public health rationale for such measures, it is essential to consider the impact of adapted services on patient's mental health and physical activity participation, and to consider staff experiences in using remote working regimes. The current study aims to recruit staff and patients from phase 3 cardiac rehabilitation across Hampshire Hospitals Foundation Trust to explore their experiences of adapted services through a mixed methods study design. Staff and patients will be interviewed over the phone to explore experiences and impacts of Covid-19 with their rich in-depth viewpoints and stories. In addition, during an 8 week period of rehabilitation, patients will be asked to report and record their physical activity levels with diaries and accelerometers (a wrist worn device measuring movement), record their resting blood pressure and heart rate, and complete questionnaires to assess changes in mental health. This study could help to understand the impact of the pandemic on cardiac patients recovery and on staff's experiences implementing programme changes to assist in preparing for the future of CR post COVID 19.

Detailed Description

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Cardiovascular disease (CVD) causes 17.9 million deaths globally each year, an estimated 31% of all deaths worldwide. Individuals diagnosed with CVD (e.g., acute coronary syndrome) are typically referred to cardiac rehabilitation (CR) following acute treatment (e.g. percutaneous coronary intervention) to facilitate both physical and psychological recovery, as well as an absolute risk reduction in cardiovascular mortality.

The timescale of CR can be divided into 4 interlinked phases. Phase 1 is marked by admission to hospital and acute care (e.g., revascularisation). Phase 2 is considered as early rehabilitation following patient discharge, usually a period of 2-6 weeks home-based support (e.g., Heart Manual) depending on when a participant is considered fit enough to start a structured exercise programme. Phase 3 CR is a comprehensive outpatient programme, considered the core rehabilitation phase, in which participants receive structured exercise, health education, risk factor modification and psychological support. Upon discharge from clinically supervised phase 3 CR participants are generally signposted to long-term community based exercise classes (phase 4).

The current study will take place within a core phase 3 CR programme in the UK. According to the National Audit of CR, 75.4% of participants receive group-based supervised programmes, and only 8.8% of participants receive home-based services in the UK (BHF, 2019). Nevertheless, the environment in which CR is being delivered has dramatically changed in response to the COVID 19 pandemic. Staff have been redeployed to COVID units, limiting operative capabilities, and in some instances postponed rehabilitation. In the midst of this global crisis, The European Association of Preventive Cardiology recommended an increased patient turnover in CR, adoption of precautions during programmes (e.g., avoiding group exercises), shortening the programmes, and following participants with remote assessment. Despite the public health rationale for such measures, it is essential to consider the impact of adapted services on participant's psychosocial health and physical activity participation, and to consider staff experiences of adaptation 'on the fly' through remote working protocols.

An integral characteristic of group-based CR settings is a positive, supporting and inclusive climate that encourages participants to manage their emotions and illness perceptions to improve coping and recovery following a cardiac event . Currently, these interpersonal dynamics have dramatically altered with the shift to remote delivery of CR components (e.g., telephone, video, internet, and social media). Hence, some of the benefits of group and face to face rehabilitation have arguably been removed. In addition, participants are now having to cope with the added threat of catching COVID 19 and having to deal with some of the potentially distressing consequences of quarantine, such as post-traumatic stress symptoms, confusion and anger. Therefore, the CR work force needs to be resilient and innovative to support participants throughout the pandemic with home-based programmes and telemedicine.

Fortunately, there is an evidence base to suggest that home-based programmes, such as the "Heart Manual", are as effective as centre-based CR in improving clinical and health-related quality of life outcomes. Indeed, novel interventions, such as telehealth weight management, Rehabilitation EnAblement in Chronic Heart Failure (REACH-HF), and cardiac telerehabilitation interventions, such as REMOTE-CR, are effective alternatives to the 'gold standard' centre-based provision. However, these findings are typically based upon randomised controlled trials (RCT) and are rarely investigated within real-world clinical settings where the research to practice gap needs to be negotiated. Scaling up RCT's and implementing novel remote programmes into CR promptly and effectively during the current pandemic could be a challenging process impacted by attitudes towards change, resources available, expertise, time, and competing priorities. Hence, it is important to assess and understand the real-world patient outcomes (e.g., physical activity participation, psychosocial and physical health) and the complexity of employing adapted CR services during the Covid-19 pandemic, including the barriers and facilitators to such implementation.

The purpose of this pilot study is to obtain quantitative and qualitative data to:

1. Assess the impact of adapted CR modalities in the UK on participants' physiological health, psychosocial health and physical activity behaviour
2. Explore CR staff's experiences of adapted delivery
3. Determine the feasibility of an adapted home-based CR programme for routine clinical practice

Conditions

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Heart Diseases

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

COHORT

Study Time Perspective

CROSS_SECTIONAL

Interventions

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Phase 3 Cardiac rehabilitation

Phase 3 CR is a comprehensive outpatient programme, considered the core rehabilitation phase, in which participants receive structured exercise, health education, risk factor modification and psychological support. Upon discharge from clinically supervised phase 3 CR participants are generally signposted to long-term community-based exercise classes (phase 4). The current study will take place within a core phase 3 CR programme in the UK.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Aged 18 years or over
* Staff and participants participating in Phase 3 CR
* Able to give informed consent
* Willing and able to undertake the interview, diary, questionnaire and accelerometer processes

Exclusion Criteria

* Aged \<18 years
* Not participating in Phase 3 CR
* Any individuals who are unable to represent their own interests or are particularly susceptible to coercion (vulnerable individuals), and are therefore unable to give informed consent
* If individuals have difficulties in adequately understanding written or verbal information in English, as the study doesn't have funding for a translator or interpreter
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Ant Shepherd

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Ant Shepherd

Senior Lecturer in Physical Activity, Exercise and Health

Responsibility Role SPONSOR_INVESTIGATOR

Central Contacts

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Samantha J Meredith, PhD

Role: CONTACT

0239284 ext. 5194

Chad SG Witcher, PhD

Role: CONTACT

0239284 ext. 5194

Other Identifiers

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005

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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