Community-based Exercise for Older Adults With Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain
NCT ID: NCT06535633
Last Updated: 2024-12-12
Study Results
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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RECRUITING
NA
72 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-09-01
2025-11-01
Brief Summary
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Musculoskeletal pain is a significant barrier to participation in physical activity for these older adults, and at present, community-based exercise trainers do not have any education or resources to help support people with chronic pain to sustain their participation in physical activity programmes. Healthcare professionals who hold negative beliefs in relation to the role of physical activity for chronic pain are more likely to provide advice that reinforces unhelpful behaviours and increases disability. Pain education has been shown to positively change beliefs and shift views towards more evidence-based physical activity recommendations in a range of professionals including physiotherapists, nurses and sports therapists. In addition, specific psychological and behavioural approaches to support self-efficacy, develop pacing skills, and manage pain flareups are required to help people with chronic pain sustain their engagement in exercise. Appropriate education is required to equip those working with people in chronic pain to facilitate these skills. While exercise is a safe intervention, there are key differences in how people with chronic pain may respond to or recover from exercise that need to be planned for in exercise programmes. People with chronic pain vary greatly in their abilities and functional limitations, goals, and lifestyle, in comparison to those without troublesome pain. A review of qualitative data from people with fibromyalgia showed that they report self-selecting an exercise intensity lower than the guideline recommended level to avoid adverse effects and build pain management skills. Patient-public involvement (PPI) focus groups and a survey conducted in the development of this protocol showed that people with chronic pain were very reluctant to enrol in current community-based physical activity opportunities due to anxiety that the exercise leader would not understand or be able to meet their specific needs, and the consequent fear of symptom exacerbation. The most important priority identified for their participation was having an exercise leader who was trained in supporting people with pain. Exercise that is tailored to the specific needs of people with pain is likely to offer a more supportive, safe, and effective approach. There is a clear need for a project developing and delivering an educational intervention for exercise trainers, to support people with pain to exercise in their community.
Detailed Description
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The control group comprises the same paper-based education manual about physical activity and pain management education designed for people with chronic pain and based on the "Explain Pain" principles. These participants will continue with usual care for their chronic pain. Based on PPI feedback suggesting the importance of equity for all who volunteer to take part, those in the control group will be offered the opportunity to participate in the intervention (group exercise classes) after they have completed their final follow up assessments.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
OTHER
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Intervention arm: Exercise classes
The investigators have trained exercise trainers in Pain neuroscience and they will lead a set of classes, adapted to the needs of people with chronic pain. Focus groups with people with chronic pain detailed the important factors to consider in planning an exercise intervention, these being that the activity should be enjoyable, non-competitive and accessible to all levels of physical activity, and the venues should offer easy access with public transport. The investigators have identified three exercise types from the current LSP offerings that could meet the needs of people with chronic MSK pain, namely Tai Chi, Activator Pole walking and Aquarobics, which will run once a week for 8 weeks. The intervention group will also receive a paper-based education manual about physical activity and pain management education designed for people with chronic pain.
Intervention arm: Exercise class
The exercise trainers, who are educated in chronic pain, will lead a set of classes, adapted to the needs of people with chronic pain. The investigators have conducted PPI activities with the members of Chronic Pain Ireland, to understand the barriers and facilitators for community-based exercise and their needs in relation to same. A forthcoming publication reports the results of a survey of a survey of (n=130) members of CPI highlightinged that key barriers to community-based exercise included fear of pain exacerbation, and not having skilled exercise instruction. The exercise modalities of choice have been informed by the survey results as well as alignment with the LSP class offerings and trainer competency. Classes on offer are focused on aquatic exercise, Activator pole walking, yoga or Pilates, and circuit-style fitness, for participants to choose their own preferred option. Classes will run weekly for 8 weeks, duration 1 hour.
Control
The control group comprises the same paper-based education manual about physical activity and pain management education designed for people with chronic pain and based on the "Explain Pain" principles. These participants will continue with usual care for their chronic pain. Based on PPI feedback suggesting the importance of equity for all who volunteer to take part, those in the control group will be offered the opportunity to participate in the intervention (group exercise classes) after they have completed their final follow up assessments.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Intervention arm: Exercise class
The exercise trainers, who are educated in chronic pain, will lead a set of classes, adapted to the needs of people with chronic pain. The investigators have conducted PPI activities with the members of Chronic Pain Ireland, to understand the barriers and facilitators for community-based exercise and their needs in relation to same. A forthcoming publication reports the results of a survey of a survey of (n=130) members of CPI highlightinged that key barriers to community-based exercise included fear of pain exacerbation, and not having skilled exercise instruction. The exercise modalities of choice have been informed by the survey results as well as alignment with the LSP class offerings and trainer competency. Classes on offer are focused on aquatic exercise, Activator pole walking, yoga or Pilates, and circuit-style fitness, for participants to choose their own preferred option. Classes will run weekly for 8 weeks, duration 1 hour.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* report chronic MSK pain of ≥3 months duration,
* not currently meeting the exercise guidelines of 150 minutes of moderate physical activity per week (determined using the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ)
Exclusion Criteria
* Participants who are unable to communicate in English sufficiently to complete consent or baseline assessment will be excluded
50 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Limerick
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Karen McCreesh, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
UL
Locations
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University of Limerick, Ireland
Limerick, , Ireland
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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DIFA-2-23-024, 7272
Identifier Type: OTHER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
2024_02_23_EHS
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id