Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT01740635
EPIC WheelS Feasibility Study
Enhancing Participation In the Community by Improving Wheelchair Skills (EPIC WheelS): A Feasibility Study
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 20 (actual)
- Sponsor
- University of British Columbia · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 50 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Many older adults have difficulty walking. A wheelchair can improve their participation but older adults typically receive little wheelchair training. Structured training programs are effective but rely on multiple 1:1 sessions with a skilled clinician. EPIC WheelS combines 2 brief training sessions and a 4-week home training program delivered using a portable computer tablet and monitored by an expert trainer. This study investigates the feasibility and potential for using EPIC WheelS with older adult novice wheelchair users in Vancouver and Winnipeg, measuring the impact on wheelchair skill, safety and confidence compared to a control group receiving only cognitive training. Hypotheses: The investigators expect that the feasibility outcomes will be sufficiently robust to support conducting a subsequent multi-site RCT. The investigators also expect the EPIC WheelS training program will have a significant treatment effect with improvement in wheelchair mobility, compared to a control group.
Detailed description
Many older adults rely on a manual wheelchair (MWC) for community mobility, but are not provided with the skills for independent and effective use of their wheelchair. Suboptimal use of the wheelchair results in substantial social costs such as reduced engagement in meaningful activity, social isolation, and higher caregiver burden. This is a poor use of financial resources, including the cost of wheelchair acquisition and requirements for attendant care. Access to skills training is constrained by the expense and limited availability of skilled therapists; demands of patient and/or clinician travel; and lack of training programs designed specifically for older adults. Enhancing Participation In the Community by improving Wheelchair Skills (EPIC WheelS) is an individualized home-training program that optimizes learning for older adults while limiting the time demands of expert trainers. Using an affordable mainstream computer tablet device, EPIC WheelS provides a structured training program that can be customized for specific users needs. The tablet is mobile, for in-chair or tabletop use, in home and community locations. A touch screen operated audio-visual display features interactive training and practice activities as well as video-recording capability. Wireless Internet enables user-trainer communication and remote program monitoring and updating by the trainer. A monitored home program that is effective and efficient for older adults has the potential for application to other target groups, particularly those in rural and remote locations with limited access to rehabilitation. PURPOSE: The purpose is to evaluate the feasibility and effect size estimate of a 1-month customized home training program (EPIC WheelS) for improving wheelchair mobility skills among novice older adult manual wheelchair users compared to usual care. Despite the pervasive use of wheelchairs as an intervention in rehabilitation, the evidence for training in effective wheelchair use is still underdeveloped. Structured training has demonstrated excellent potential, but the most effective and efficient means of providing that training remains unclear. Larger multi-site clinical trials are required to establish evidence to inform and direct clinical practice. The investigators propose that this 2-year feasibility trial is not only critical, but also prudent, prior to moving forward with an expensive large multi-site randomized controlled trial (RCT). Specifically the results of this study will address 1) feasibility outcomes (i.e., recruitment and retention; trainer and subject burden; safety; intervention administration and adherence; perceived benefit) and 2) clinical outcomes (i.e., effect size calculations for the primary and secondary measures). Although the principal intent is feasibility, the sample size calculation is based on the primary clinical outcome to provide a reasonable estimate of an effect size for planning the subsequent large scale RCT. HYPOTHESES: The investigators expect that the feasibility outcomes will be sufficiently robust to support conducting a subsequent multi-site RCT. The investigators also expect the EPIC WheelS training program will have a significant treatment effect with improvement in wheelchair mobility, compared to a control group. The primary clinical endpoint will be wheelchair skill capacity, as measured by the Wheelchair Skills Test (WST). Secondary clinical outcomes will include wheelchair skill safety; confidence with wheelchair use; mobility; and user evaluation of performance in participation-oriented activities.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| DEVICE | EPIC WheelS Training Program | Subjects will attend an initial assessment/training session and receive a customized home program from their Trainer, which is delivered by way of a portable, interactive computer tablet that can be used for practice in their home or other community venues. After 2 weeks of practice, subjects return for a second 1-hour training session. The Trainer updates their program and they continue practicing at home for another 2 weeks. Subjects will have a caregiver attend all training sessions and supervise their home training. Trainers monitor subject activity remotely and will contact subjects by telephone at the end of weeks 1 and 3 to promote program adherence. Participants in an extra wheeling sub-group will be instructed to perform additional, unstructured wheeling for 15 minutes, 5 days per week and document these on a simple calendar-style form provided. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2013-03-01
- Primary completion
- 2016-03-01
- Completion
- 2016-05-01
- First posted
- 2012-12-04
- Last updated
- 2018-05-30
Locations
2 sites across 1 country: Canada
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01740635. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.