Feasibility trial of an integrated treatment “Activate for Life” for physical and mental well-being in older adults

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Abstract

Background: Pain and fatigue are common chronic conditions faced by older adults. Integrated interventions to address pain and fatigue may therefore be particularly useful for older adults, especially those interventions that target mobility and psychosocial well-being. The present study describes feasibility and participant satisfaction for an integrated eHealth treatment to address pain and fatigue in a sample of older adults living in a low-income independent residence facility and their own homes in the community. Methods: Three treatment combinations were compared in a randomized repeated measures design to determine if adding components of breathing retraining and behavioral activation to the existing Otago program (for strength and balance) affected feasibility and patient satisfaction. Specifically, 30 older adults were randomly allocated to: Arm1: the Otago alone (n = 10); Arm 2: Otago + Gentle Yoga and Yogic Breathing (n = 10); or Arm 3: Otago + Gentle Yoga and Yogic Breathing + Behavioral Activation (combination was named ‘Activate for Life’ n = 10). Feasibility measures included recruitment rate, session completion characteristics, and satisfaction with the program. Conclusion: Data from this study provide support for the feasibility of an integrated program to address physical and mental well-being of older adults. Future fully powered studies should now focus on assessment of clinical outcomes and refinement of individual components. Trial registration: Registered in clinicaltrials.gov with the identifier: NCT03853148.

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APA

Hernandez-Tejada, M. A., Nagel, A., Madisetti, M., Balasubramanian, S., & Kelechi, T. (2022). Feasibility trial of an integrated treatment “Activate for Life” for physical and mental well-being in older adults. Pilot and Feasibility Studies, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40814-022-01000-8

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