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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Serious Games

Date Submitted: Mar 30, 2021
Open Peer Review Period: Apr 12, 2021 - Jun 12, 2021
Date Accepted: Jun 28, 2021
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

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

Feasibility of a Sensor-Controlled Digital Game for Heart Failure Self-management: Randomized Controlled Trial

Radhakrishnan K, Julien C, Baranowski T, O'Hair M, Lee G, De Main AS, Allen C, Viswanathan B, Thomaz E, Kim MT

Feasibility of a Sensor-Controlled Digital Game for Heart Failure Self-management: Randomized Controlled Trial

JMIR Serious Games 2021;9(4):e29044

DOI: 10.2196/29044

PMID: 34747701

PMCID: 8663490

Sensor-controlled digital game and heart failure self-management behaviors: A feasibility randomized controlled trial study

  • Kavita Radhakrishnan; 
  • Christine Julien; 
  • Thomas Baranowski; 
  • Matthew O'Hair; 
  • Grace Lee; 
  • Atami S De Main; 
  • Catherine Allen; 
  • Bindu Viswanathan; 
  • Edison Thomaz; 
  • Miyong To Kim

ABSTRACT

Background:

Poor self-management of heart failure (HF) contributes to devastating health consequences. Our innovative sensor-controlled digital game (SCDG) integrates data from sensors to trigger game rewards, progress, and feedback based on HF individuals’ real-time behaviors.

Objective:

To compare daily weight-monitoring and physical activity behavior adherence by older adults using a SCDG intervention versus a sensor-only intervention, in a feasibility randomized controlled trial.

Methods:

English-speaking HF adults aged ≥55 years who owned a smartphone and could walk unassisted were recruited from Texas and Oklahoma from November 2019 to August 2020. Both groups were given activity tracker and smart weight scale sensors to track behaviors for 12 weeks. Feasibility outcomes of recruitment, retention, intervention engagement, and satisfaction were assessed. Besides daily weight-monitoring and physical activity adherence, participants’ knowledge, functional status, quality of life (QoL), self-reported HF behaviors, motivation to engage in behaviors, and HF-related hospitalization were also compared between the groups at baseline, 6, 12, and 24 weeks.

Results:

Participants (N=38; intervention n=19; control n=19) with HF were enrolled (47% female, 47% ≥65 years, 55% HF hospitalization in past 6 months, 76% White); 82% of patients (n=31; intervention, 15/19, 79%; control, 16/19, 84%) had both weight monitoring and physical activity data at the end of 12 weeks and 71% (n =27; intervention, 14/19, 74%; control, 13/19, 68%) participated in follow-up assessments at 24 weeks. For the intervention group participants who installed the SCDG app (n=15), the number of days each player opened the game app was strongly associated with the number of days the player engaged in weight-monitoring (r=0.72, P=0.04) and with the number of days with physical activity step data (r=0.9, P < 0.001). Participants who completed the satisfaction survey (intervention, n=13) reported that the SCDG was easy to use. Trends of improvement in daily weight-monitoring and physical activity in the intervention group and within-group improvements in HF functional status, QoL, knowledge, self-efficacy, and HF hospitalization in both groups were observed in this feasibility trial.

Conclusions:

Playing an SCDG on smartphones was feasible and acceptable for older adults with HF for motivating daily weight monitoring and physical activity. A larger efficacy trial of the SCDG intervention will be needed to validate trends of improvement in daily weight monitoring and physical activity behaviors. Clinical Trial: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03947983; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03947983


 Citation

Please cite as:

Radhakrishnan K, Julien C, Baranowski T, O'Hair M, Lee G, De Main AS, Allen C, Viswanathan B, Thomaz E, Kim MT

Feasibility of a Sensor-Controlled Digital Game for Heart Failure Self-management: Randomized Controlled Trial

JMIR Serious Games 2021;9(4):e29044

DOI: 10.2196/29044

PMID: 34747701

PMCID: 8663490

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