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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05139173

Novel Shoulder Rehabilitation Program (SPARS-REHAB)

User Centred Design and Pilot Testing of a Novel Shoulder Rehabilitation Program With Engagement Tracking

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
25 (actual)
Sponsor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Physical therapy is essential for the successful rehabilitation of common shoulder injuries and following shoulder surgery. Patients may receive some training and supervision for shoulder physiotherapy through private pay or private insurance, but they are typically responsible for performing most of their physiotherapy independently at home. It is unknown how often patients perform their home exercises, if these exercises are done correctly without supervision, and how poor adherence might impact recovery. The investigators have recently developed a Smart Physiotherapy Activity Recognition System (SPARS) for tracking home shoulder physiotherapy exercises using sensors in a commercial smart watch and artificial intelligence (AI). SPARS was successful in identifying shoulder exercises in healthy adults in the laboratory setting, and in patients undergoing physiotherapy for rotator cuff pathology. Further inquiry is required to establish the clinical effectiveness of this technology for tracking and improving patient engagement, and to investigate the potential individual impacts of its use.

Detailed description

The Research Team will conduct in-person data collection on 30 patients, by recording patients' exercises during their supervised physiotherapy sessions each week using the SPARS smart watch. Each patient will wear the smart watch on their affected arm only when performing prescribed exercises, and the watch will start recording inertial sensor data once the patient puts the watch on and the exercise is started on the tablet. An app installed on the provided Android smart tablet allows the patient to view their assigned exercises, videos showing them how to perform those exercises, and the record of their tracked participation. A tablet app will also be available to the treating physiotherapist to allow them to view this same data. The purpose of the participation tracking is to promote better patient engagement in the home component of physiotherapy. The injured worker population will be recruited from referrals made to the Sunnybrook Working Condition Program (WCP) at the Holland Centre for a work-related shoulder injury. Physical therapy of the patient population will be recruited from referrals by the Sunnybrook Shoulder and Upper Extremity Program funded by study grants. Data collection will be collected at each supervised physiotherapy session during the course of a patient's treatment. Follow-up outcomes such as surveys and shoulder testing will be done at 6 weeks, monthly at a maximum of 3 months (OHIP-patients) and 5 months (WSIB) patients, final treatment session (if different than maximum amount), and 1 year after.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICESmart Physiotherapy Activity Recognition System (SPARS)Wearable smart watch that records inertial data such as (accelerometer, gyroscope magnetometer) and the exercise is started on the tablet, while patients are performing physiotherapy exercises.

Timeline

Start date
2022-01-17
Primary completion
2024-10-08
Completion
2024-10-08
First posted
2021-12-01
Last updated
2025-08-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05139173. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.