Usability of a telehealth-nurse supported home-based walking training for peripheral arterial disease – The Keep Pace! pilot study

Andreas Prenner, Andreas Ziegl, Fabian Wiesmüller, Gihan El Moazen, Dieter Hayn, Anna Prenner, Marianne Brodmann, Gerald Seinost, Robert Modre-Osprian, Günter Schreier, Günther Silbernagel

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikel

Abstract

SUMMARY:
Background: Guidelines recommend walking trainings for peripheral arterial disease (PAD) management. Supervised walking training is superior to walking advise to improve the walking distance. Telehealth service with nurse support may close this gap.
Patients and methods: This study introduces a telehealth service, “Keep pace!”, which has been developed for patients with symptomatic PAD (Fontaine stage IIa and IIb), enabling a structured home-based walking training while monitoring progress via an app collecting unblinded account of steps and walking distance in self-paced 6-minute-walking-tests by geolocation tracking to enhance intrinsic motivation. Supervision by nurses via telephone calls was provided for 8 weeks, followed by 4 weeks of independent walking training. Patient satisfaction, walking distance and health-related quality of life were assessed. Results: 19 patients completed the study. The analysis revealed an overall high satisfaction with the telehealth service (95.4%), including system quality (95.1%), information quality (94.4%), service quality (95.6%), intention to use (92.8%), general satisfaction with the program (98.4%) and health benefits (95.8%). 78.9% asserted that the telehealth service lacking nurse calls would be less efficacious. Pain-free walking distance (76.3±36.8m to 188.4±81.2m, +112.2%, p<0.001) as well as total distance in 6-minute-walking test (308.8±82.6m to 425.9±107.1m, +117.2%, p<0.001) improved significantly. The telehealth service significantly reduced discomfort by better pain control (+15.5%, p=0.015) and social participation (+10.5%, p=0.042).
Conclusions: In conclusion, patients were highly satisfied with the telehealth service. The physical well-being of the PAD patients improved significantly post vs. prior the telehealth program.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummera001127
Seiten (von - bis)246-254
Seitenumfang9
FachzeitschriftVasa - European Journal of Vascular Medicine
Volume53
Issue4
Frühes Online-Datum29 Mai 2024
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 1 Juli 2024

Research Field

  • Exploration of Digital Health

Fingerprint

Untersuchen Sie die Forschungsthemen von „Usability of a telehealth-nurse supported home-based walking training for peripheral arterial disease – The Keep Pace! pilot study“. Zusammen bilden sie einen einzigartigen Fingerprint.

Diese Publikation zitieren