Technology-based Comprehensive Cardiac Rehabilitation Therapy (TaCT) for women with cardiovascular disease in a middle-income setting: A randomized controlled trial protocol.
Henita Joshna MenezesSonia R B D'SouzaRamachandran PadmakumarAbraham Samuel BabuRohini R RaoVeena Ganesh KamathAsha KamathSherry Lynn GracePublished in: Research in nursing & health (2022)
Women are underrepresented in cardiac rehabilitation (CR) despite the benefits, and this is exacerbated in lower-resource settings where CR is insufficiently available. In this randomized controlled trial, the effectiveness of the Technology-based Comprehensive Cardiac Rehabilitation Therapy (TaCT) electronic cardiac rehabilitation (eCR) intervention on functional capacity, risk factors, quality of life, heart-health behaviors, symptoms, and morbidity will be tested among women with CVD in a middle-income country. Following a pilot study, a single-center, single-blinded, 2 parallel-arm (1:1 SNOSE) superiority trial comparing an eCR intervention (TaCT) to usual care, with assessments pre-intervention and at 3 and 6 months will be undertaken. One hundred adult women will be recruited. Permuted block (size 10) randomization will be applied. The 6-month intervention comprises an app, website, SMS texts with generic heart-health management advice, and bi-weekly 1:1 telephone calls with a nurse trainee. Individualized exercise prescriptions will be developed based on an Incremental Shuttle Walk Test (primary outcome) and dietary plans based on 24 h dietary recall. A yoga/relaxation video will be provided via WhatsApp, along with tobacco cessation support and a moderated group chat. At 3 months, intervention engagement and acceptability will be assessed. Analyses will be conducted based on intent-to-treat. If results of this novel trial of women-focused eCR in a middle-income country demonstrate clinically-significant increases in functional capacity, this could represent an important development for the field considering this would be an important outcome for women and would translate to lower mortality.
Keyphrases
- randomized controlled trial
- study protocol
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- mental health
- risk factors
- healthcare
- cardiovascular disease
- physical activity
- pregnancy outcomes
- public health
- clinical trial
- systematic review
- palliative care
- heart failure
- cervical cancer screening
- primary care
- quality improvement
- pregnant women
- cardiovascular events
- young adults
- phase ii
- health insurance
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- human health
- coronary artery disease
- body composition
- double blind
- metabolic syndrome
- placebo controlled
- cardiovascular risk factors
- meta analyses