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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Cardio

Date Submitted: Sep 7, 2020
Date Accepted: Nov 30, 2021

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

The Impact of a Mobile App on Participation in Cardiac Rehabilitation and Understanding Barriers to Success: Comparative Cohort Study

Rivers JT, Smith C, Smith I, Cameron J

The Impact of a Mobile App on Participation in Cardiac Rehabilitation and Understanding Barriers to Success: Comparative Cohort Study

JMIR Cardio 2022;6(1):e24174

DOI: 10.2196/24174

PMID: 35037891

PMCID: 8804955

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

The impact of a smartphone enabled application on participation in cardiac rehabilitation and understanding barriers to success: a cohort study

  • John T Rivers; 
  • Carla Smith; 
  • Ian Smith; 
  • James Cameron

ABSTRACT

Background:

Poor patient uptake of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) remains a challenge for multiple reasons including geographic, time, cultural, cost and psychological constraints.

Objective:

We evaluated the impact on CR participation associated with the introduction of a smartphone enabled app (Cardihab) for patients declining conventional CR and investigated the barriers to participation in CR.

Methods:

204 consecutive patients were offered CR post angioplasty, 99 in phase 1 (conventional CR) and 105 in phase 2 (app-based CR for those declining conventional CR). Patients were followed throughout a 6-week CR program in phase 2 and participation rates compared for both groups. Patients declining to participate in either form of CR were interviewed to assess reasons for non-participation.

Results:

CR participation improved from 21% (14%-30%) to 63% (53%-71%) with the addition of the smartphone enabled app. Approximately 25% of the group declining the app-based program identified technology issues as the reason for non-participation. The remainder declined both CR programs or were ineligible due to frailty or comorbidities.

Conclusions:

Use of an app-based program substantially improved CR participation. Technology and psychological barriers can limit CR participation. Innovation in CR delivery systems is required to improve uptake. Clinical Trial: Not applicable


 Citation

Please cite as:

Rivers JT, Smith C, Smith I, Cameron J

The Impact of a Mobile App on Participation in Cardiac Rehabilitation and Understanding Barriers to Success: Comparative Cohort Study

JMIR Cardio 2022;6(1):e24174

DOI: 10.2196/24174

PMID: 35037891

PMCID: 8804955

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