Virtual AppLication-supported Environment To INcrease Exercise (VALENTINE) during cardiac rehabilitation study: Rationale and design

In-person, exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation improves physical activity and reduces morbidity and mortality for patients with cardiovascular disease. However, activity levels may not be optimized and decline over time after patients graduate from cardiac rehabilitation. Scalable interventions th...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American heart journal 2022-06, Vol.248, p.53-62
Hauptverfasser: Jeganathan, V. Swetha, Golbus, Jessica R., Gupta, Kashvi, Luff, Evan, Dempsey, Walter, Boyden, Thomas, Rubenfire, Melvyn, Mukherjee, Brahmar, Klasnja, Predrag, Kheterpal, Sachin, Nallamothu, Brahmajee K.
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container_title The American heart journal
container_volume 248
creator Jeganathan, V. Swetha
Golbus, Jessica R.
Gupta, Kashvi
Luff, Evan
Dempsey, Walter
Boyden, Thomas
Rubenfire, Melvyn
Mukherjee, Brahmar
Klasnja, Predrag
Kheterpal, Sachin
Nallamothu, Brahmajee K.
description In-person, exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation improves physical activity and reduces morbidity and mortality for patients with cardiovascular disease. However, activity levels may not be optimized and decline over time after patients graduate from cardiac rehabilitation. Scalable interventions through mobile health (mHealth) technologies have the potential to augment activity levels and extend the benefits of cardiac rehabilitation. The VALENTINE Study is a prospective, randomized-controlled, remotely-administered trial designed to evaluate an mHealth intervention to supplement cardiac rehabilitation for low- and moderate-risk patients (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04587882). Participants are randomized to the control or intervention arms of the study. Both groups receive a compatible smartwatch (Fitbit Versa 2 or Apple Watch 4) and usual care. Participants in the intervention arm of the study additionally receive a just-in-time adaptive intervention (JITAI) delivered as contextually tailored notifications promoting low-level physical activity and exercise throughout the day. In addition, they have access to activity tracking and goal setting through the mobile study application and receive weekly activity summaries via email. The primary outcome is change in 6-minute walk distance at 6-months and, secondarily, change in average daily step count. Exploratory analyses will examine the impact of notifications on immediate short-term smartwatch-measured step counts and exercise minutes. The VALENTINE study leverages innovative techniques in behavioral and cardiovascular disease research and will make a significant contribution to our understanding of how to support patients using mHealth technologies to promote and sustain physical activity.
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subjects Cardiac Rehabilitation
Cardiovascular disease
Cardiovascular Diseases
Consent
Disease prevention
Enrollments
Exercise
Fitness Trackers
Goal setting
Heart
Heart rate
Humans
Intervention
Morbidity
Mortality
Physical activity
Physical fitness
Physical training
Physiology
Planning
Prospective Studies
Rehabilitation
Remote control
Smartphones
Smartwatches
Telemedicine
Wearable computers
title Virtual AppLication-supported Environment To INcrease Exercise (VALENTINE) during cardiac rehabilitation study: Rationale and design
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