Abstract

BackgroundCommunity-dwelling older adults living in rural areas are in a less favorable environment for health care compared with urban older adults. We believe that intermittent coaching through wearable devices can help optimize health care for older adults in medically limited environments.ObjectiveWe aimed to evaluate whether a wearable device and mobile-based intermittent coaching or self-management could increase physical activity and health outcomes of small groups of older adults in rural areas.MethodsTo address the above evaluation goal, we carried out the “Smart Walk” program, a health care model wherein a wearable device is used to promote self-exercise particularly among community-dwelling older adults managed by a community health center. We randomly selected older adults who had enrolled in a population-based, prospective cohort study of aging, the Aging Study of Pyeongchang Rural Area. The “Smart Walk” program was a 13-month program conducted from March 2017 to March 2018 and included 6 months of coaching, 1 month of rest, and 6 months of self-management. We evaluated differences in physical activity and health outcomes according to frailty status and conducted pre- and postanalyses of the Smart Walk program. We also performed intergroup analysis according to adherence of wearable devices.ResultsWe recruited 22 participants (11 robust and 11 prefrail older adults). The two groups were similar in most of the variables, except for age, frailty index, and Short Physical Performance Battery score associated with frailty criteria. After a 6-month coaching program, the prefrail group showed significant improvement in usual gait speed (mean 0.73 [SD 0.11] vs mean 0.96 [SD 0.27], P=.02), International Physical Activity Questionnaire scores in kcal (mean 2790.36 [SD 2224.62] vs mean 7589.72 [SD 4452.52], P=.01), and European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions score (mean 0.84 [SD 0.07] vs mean 0.90 [SD 0.07], P=.02), although no significant improvement was found in the robust group. The average total step count was significantly different and was approximately four times higher in the coaching period than in the self-management period (5,584,295.83 vs 1,289,084.66, P<.001). We found that participants in the “long-self” group who used the wearable device for the longest time showed increased body weight and body mass index by mean 0.65 (SD 1.317) and mean 0.097 (SD 0.513), respectively, compared with the other groups.ConclusionsOur “Smart Walk” program improved physical fitness, anthropometric measurements, and geriatric assessment categories in a small group of older adults in rural areas with limited resources for monitoring. Further validation through various rural public health centers and in a large number of rural older adults is required.

Highlights

  • Unlike young adults, elderly individuals have different medical characteristics

  • Frailty is an age-related syndrome characterized by decreased physiologic reserve and increased vulnerability to stressors that lead to adverse health outcomes, such as disability, falls, institutionalization, and mortality [3]

  • This study aimed to evaluate whether a simple mobile health care device and mobile-based intermittent coaching or self-management can increase the physical activity and health outcome of older adults in rural areas

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Summary

Introduction

Each older adult has a highly heterogeneous health status [1,2]. Many frail older adults have diminished physiologic reservoirs and deteriorate regardless of their comorbidities [3]. Early detection and an appropriate preventive approach are crucial for older adults. A frailty-based approach has been widely applied in communities having an older population [4]. Unlike the traditional comorbidity-based approach, a frailty-based strategy includes the concepts of an individualized approach, disability prevention, and enhancing quality of life regardless of age [5]. We believe that intermittent coaching through wearable devices can help optimize health care for older adults in medically limited environments

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