The “ACTIVE-CR” study, V1

  • Research type

    Research Study

  • Full title

    Wearable technology for personalised physical activity feedback in cardiac patients: A feasibility study

  • IRAS ID

    316164

  • Contact name

    Oliver Peacock

  • Contact email

    ojp22@bath.ac.uk

  • Sponsor organisation

    University of Bath

  • Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier

    NCT05605015

  • Duration of Study in the UK

    0 years, 11 months, 31 days

  • Research summary

    Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is a comprehensive, long-term secondary care programme offered to individuals after a heart attack to aid recovery and prevent further illness. If properly implemented, CR is highly effective at reducing cardiac mortality, re-event, and re-admissions. Despite the well-established benefits, less than 50% of eligible UK patients enrol on a CR program. Among those who do begin CR in the UK, drop-out rates of 12-55% have been reported. If the take up of CR were increased to 65% it would reduce readmissions by a third and save approximately £100 million per year.

    Physical activity is the cornerstone of CR. With recent advances in wearable activity monitors, accurate and objective assessment of free-living PA is now possible. It is increasingly apparent that the health benefits of PA can be achieved in many ways, and multiple dimensions (or aspects) of PA are independently important. The most sophisticated wearable devices can be used to capture these different dimensions and provide a more comprehensive evaluation of free-living PA – enabling patients to understand their individual PA in the context of guidelines – and offering more behavioural options and personalised advice.

    In prior work, we have developed a digital system for patients to self-manage their PA. This system comprises a wearable wrist-mounted accelerometer, bespoke digital platform, plus remote virtual support. The digital system has been customised for CR based on qualitative research in cardiac patients and practitioners – who found PA feedback to be understandable and motivating – and a route to address barrier to taking part in CR. This study aims to examine the feasibility of delivering a 6-week trial of a remote, technology-enabled physical activity intervention to patients who were unable to take up or dropped out of CR in the last 12 months.

  • REC name

    South West - Cornwall & Plymouth Research Ethics Committee

  • REC reference

    22/SW/0178

  • Date of REC Opinion

    20 Dec 2022

  • REC opinion

    Favourable Opinion