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CompletedNCT05107440

BREATHE: Virtual Self-management for Long COVID-19

BREATHE: A Mixed-methods Evaluation of a Virtual Self-management Program for People Living With Long COVID-19 in Alberta

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
27 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Calgary · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

A mixed-methods evaluation of a virtual self-management program for people living with long COVID in Alberta.

Detailed description

Background \& Rationale The possible volume of current and future long COVID patients in Alberta is so high (based on the above numbers, more than 20,000) that primary care may not be able to cope given current resources (for example, the waitlist for post-COVID-19 clinics is \>3 months). While a Rehabilitation Advice Line and online resources have been created for Albertans with long COVID, many patients are struggling and need more support for self-management to promote recovery. Alongside shortness of breath, long COVID is often characterized by chronic fatigue that is clinically relevant and is at least as severe as fatigue in several other clinical conditions. Other symptoms can include dry cough, cognitive impairment ("brain fog"), heart palpitations, chest tightness, and dizziness. Individuals living with long COVID describe an unpredictable and episodic trajectory with a relapse-remitting nature. Since February 2021, the investigators have been delivering a free virtual program for people with long COVID in Alberta due to an overwhelming demand for physical therapy/support for chronic symptoms. This program has undergone iterative improvements based on new understanding and participant feedback. The program is feasible given the ongoing demand (rapid recruitment of 16-18 participants in three previous programs) and high attendance (\>80%). In the most recent cohort, of the participants that responded, 100% found the program helpful, 91% felt more confident about managing symptoms, 91% would recommend the program to other people with long COVID (feedback collected using a brief anonymous survey as part of quality improvement). The objective of this exploratory study is to collect quantitative and qualitative data to evaluate the safety and acceptability of a virtual self-management program for people living with long COVID. Pre-to-post intervention patient-reported outcomes (PROs) will also be collected, and the proportion of participants improving or deteriorating will be reported. Methods This is a mixed-methods evaluation of a free, virtual, multidisciplinary, patient-centred self-management program for long COVID. The BREATHE program provides education on Breathing, Rest/recovery, Education, Activity management, Thinking/cognition, Healthy voice strategies, and Eating/nutrition. Two previous pilot iterations of the program took place earlier in 2021, and the BREATHE program in its current format is currently taking place (Aug-Oct, 2021) and will be repeated from Oct-Dec 2021. There is no required in-person element to this study; assessments and program sessions take place virtually via REDCap (secure data collection platform) and Zoom (secure video platform). Participant eligibility criteria were based on the World Health Organization's clinical case definition for post COVID-19 condition. BREATHE is an eight-week intervention involving two sessions per week, hosted virtually on Zoom. The content was developed based on clinical experience, best available evidence for the management of specific symptoms (chronic fatigue, post-exertional malaise, breathing discomfort, sleep disruption) in other conditions, including post-viral syndromes, and the current understanding and recommendations for rehabilitation of people living with long COVID. The remaining sessions were developed and delivered by content experts (occupational therapist, nutritional consultant, mental health professional) who are familiar with the unique difficulties that people with long COVID face. The investigators have incorporated breakout rooms to include elements of peer support (affirmation of feelings and behaviours, expressions of empathy and reassurance, support for coping with negative emotions, encouraging persistence and optimism). Intervention attendance and adverse events will be reported. Because this is a self-management intervention, the main pre-post outcome of interest is participants' confidence in managing their symptoms and daily activities. Additional outcomes are fatigue, breathing discomfort, functional status and health-related quality of life. To gain participant perspectives on the BREATHE program, participants will be asked to take part in a one-on-one interview via Zoom within two weeks following the final intervention session. A semi-structured interview guide was developed, informed by the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERBREATHEA virtual, multidisciplinary, patient-centred self-management program for long COVID. The BREATHE program provides education on Breathing, Rest/recovery, Education, Activity management, Thinking/cognition, Healthy voice strategies, and Eating/nutrition.

Timeline

Start date
2022-01-03
Primary completion
2022-06-20
Completion
2022-10-13
First posted
2021-11-04
Last updated
2022-12-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05107440. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.