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"Orme, Mark"
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Community-Based Pulmonary Rehabilitation in an Economically Deprived Area of Jodhpur, India: A Mixed-Methods Feasibility Trial
2025
Mahendra Thakor,1,* Vishal Singh,1,* James Manifield,2,3 Mark W Orme,2,3 Pankaj Bhardwaj,4 Nishant Kumar Chauhan,4 Amy C Barradell,2,3 Zahira Ahmed,2,3 Yashika Bhati,1 Jesse Matheson,5 Andy Barton,3 Arun Kumar Sharma,6 Sally J Singh2,31ICMR-National Institute for Implementation Research on Non-Communicable Diseases, Jodhpur, India; 2Centre for Exercise and Rehabilitation Science, Department of Respiratory Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK; 3Centre for Exercise and Rehabilitation Science, NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre-Respiratory, University Hospitals of Leicester, Leicester, UK; 4All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Jodhpur, India; 5Department of Economics, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK; 6Department of Community Medicine, University College of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Mahendra Thakor, ICMR-National Institute for Implementation Research on Non-Communicable Diseases, New Pali Road, Jodhpur, 342005, India, Email [email protected]
Journal Article
Adherence to walking exercise prescription during pulmonary rehabilitation in COPD with a commercial activity monitor: a feasibility trial
2021
Background
Regular exercise is important in the management of COPD. Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) facilitates a more physically active lifestyle through exercise participation, ideally without compromising non-exercise physical activity (PA). During PR patients are advised to perform exercise defined by duration and intensity. The extent to which PR attendees participate in unsupervised exercise bouts and their adherence to the exercise prescription provided during PR is unclear. Commercially available devices have the potential to support patients to exercise at their individually prescribed intensity. Study aims were to (1) assess how adherent patients are to their prescribed walking intensity; (2) examine the pattern of overall PA and walking exercise during the course of PR; (3) determine the feasibility of prescribing exercise to PR attendees using an activity monitor; and (4) explore the relationship between exercise and non-exercise PA with routine PR outcome measures.
Methods
19 patients wore an activity monitor during routine walking tests and 6 weeks of PR, recording in a diary when they exercised. Exercise intensity (cadence) was prescribed from the Endurance Shuttle Walk Test. Patients completed questionnaires, walking tests and a lower limb strength test before and after PR. Repeated ANOVA compared changes in outcomes between weeks 1–6.
Results
Patients wore the monitor every day during PR (median 42 days). Exercise steps increased by 56% (Δ332 [95% CI 54–611] steps/day, p = 0.009) between weeks 1 and 6, with no significant change in non-exercise steps (Δ79 [95% CI − 22 to − 179] steps/day, p = 0.13). Patients reported exercising on 70% of days. Adherence to prescribed cadence was achieved 55% of time spent exercising, and did not change across the 6 weeks (p = 0.907). Change in total daily steps was associated with improved dyspnea (p = 0.027), Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire (CRQ) Dyspnea domain (p = 0.019), CRQ Emotional Functioning domain (p = 0.001) and CRQ Mastery domain scores (p = 0.001) but not with exercise capacity or lower limb muscle strength.
Conclusions
Improvements in exercise participation, not at the expense of non-exercise PA, throughout a PR course was observed in attendees provided with a commercially available activity monitor. Wearable technology may be able to support effective remote walking exercise prescription and participation during PR.
Trial registration (retrospectively registered)
:
http://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN15892972
.
Journal Article
A digital lifestyle behaviour change intervention for the prevention of type 2 diabetes: a qualitative study exploring intuitive engagement with real-time glucose and physical activity feedback
by
Orme, Mark W.
,
Sherar, Lauren B.
,
Kingsnorth, Andrew P.
in
Allocations
,
Behavior
,
Biostatistics
2021
Background
Mobile health technologies have advanced to now allow monitoring of the acute physiological responses to lifestyle behaviours. Our aim was to explore how people engaged with real-time feedback on their physical activity and glucose levels over several weeks.
Methods
Semi-structured interviews with 26 participants (61.5% female, 56.6 years) at moderate-to-high risk of developing type 2 diabetes were conducted. Interviews were completed after participants took part in an intervention comprising a flash glucose monitor (Freestyle Libre) and a physical activity monitor (Fitbit Charge 2). Purposive sampling ensured representation of ages, genders and group allocations.
Results
Inductive thematic analysis revealed how individuals intuitively used, interpreted and acted on feedback from wearable technologies. Six key themes emerged: triggers of engagement with the technologies, links between behaviour and health, lack of confidence, changes to movement behaviours, changes to diet and barriers to lifestyle behaviour change.
Conclusions
Our findings demonstrate that accessing behavioural and physiological feedback can increase self-awareness of how lifestyle impacts short-term health. Some participants noticed a link between the feedback presented by the two devices and changed their behaviour but many did not. Training and educational support, as well as efforts to optimize how feedback is presented to users, are needed to sustain engagement and behaviour change. Extensions of this work to involve people with diabetes are also warranted to explore whether behavioural and physiological feedback in parallel can encourage better diabetes self-management.
Trial registration
ISRCTN Registry,
ISRCTN17545949
, 12/05/2017, prospectively registered.
Journal Article
Can quantifying the relative intensity of a person’s free-living physical activity predict how they respond to a physical activity intervention? Findings from the PACES RCT
by
Maylor, Ben
,
Rowlands, Alex V
,
Herring, Louisa
in
Accelerometers
,
Cardiovascular disease
,
Exercise
2023
ObjectivesTo determine whether quantifying both the absolute and relative intensity of accelerometer-assessed physical activity (PA) can inform PA interventions. We hypothesised that individuals whose free-living PA is at a low relative intensity are more likely to increase PA in response to an intervention, as they have spare physical capacity.MethodWe conducted a secondary data analysis of a 12-month randomised controlled trial, Physical Activity after Cardiac EventS, which was designed to increase PA but showed no improvement. Participants (N=239, 86% male; age 66.4 (9.7); control N=126, intervention N=113) wore accelerometers for 7 days and performed the incremental shuttle walk test (ISWT) at baseline and 12 months. PA intensity was expressed in absolute terms (intensity gradient) and relative to acceleration at maximal physical capacity (predicted from an individual’s maximal ISWT walking speed). PA outcomes were volume and absolute intensity gradient.ResultsAt baseline, ISWT performance was positively correlated with PA volume (r=0.50, p<0.001) and absolute intensity (r=0.50, p<0.001), but negatively correlated with relative intensity (r=−0.13, p=0.025). Relative intensity of PA at baseline moderated the change in absolute intensity (p=0.017), but not volume, of PA postintervention. Low relative intensity at baseline was associated with increased absolute intensity gradient (+0.5 SD), while high relative intensity at baseline was associated with decreased absolute intensity gradient (−0.5 SD).ConclusionThose with low relative intensity of PA were more likely to increase their absolute PA intensity gradient in response to an intervention. Quantifying absolute and relative PA intensity of PA could improve enables personalisation of interventions.
Journal Article
A proof of concept for continuous, non-invasive, free-living vital signs monitoring to predict readmission following an acute exacerbation of COPD: a prospective cohort study
by
Orme, Mark W.
,
Steiner, Michael C.
,
Esliger, Dale
in
Antibiotics
,
Care and treatment
,
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
2022
Background
The use of vital signs monitoring in the early recognition of an acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) post-hospital discharge is limited. This study investigated whether continuous vital signs monitoring could predict an AECOPD and readmission.
Methods
35 people were recruited at discharge following hospitalisation for an AECOPD. Participants were asked to wear an Equivital LifeMonitor during waking hours for 6 weeks and to complete the Exacerbations of Chronic Pulmonary Disease Tool (EXACT), a 14-item symptom diary, daily. The Equivital LifeMonitor recorded respiratory rate (RR), heart rate (HR), skin temperature (ST) and physical activity (PA) every 15-s. An AECOPD was classified as mild (by EXACT score), moderate (prescribed oral steroids/antibiotics) or severe (hospitalisation).
Results
Over the 6-week period, 31 participants provided vital signs and symptom data and 14 participants experienced an exacerbation, of which, 11 had sufficient data to predict an AECOPD. HR and PA were associated with EXACT score (p < 0.001). Three days prior to an exacerbation, RR increased by mean ± SD 2.0 ± 0.2 breaths/min for seven out of 11 exacerbations and HR increased by 8.1 ± 0.7 bpm for nine of these 11 exacerbations.
Conclusions
Increased heart rate and reduced physical activity were associated with worsening symptoms. Even with high-resolution data, the variation in vital signs data remains a challenge for predicting AECOPDs. Respiratory rate and heart rate should be further explored as potential predictors of an impending AECOPD.
Trial registration:
ISRCTN registry; ISRCTN12855961. Registered 07 November 2018—Retrospectively registered,
https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN12855961
Journal Article
Pulmonary rehabilitation healthcare professionals understanding and experiences of the protected characteristics of service users: A qualitative analysis
2025
Background
Health inequalities can affect access and uptake to pulmonary rehabilitation (PR). An individual’s protected characteristics (age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex and sexual orientation) may contribute to health inequalities. Healthcare professionals (HCPs) experiences of the inclusivity and representativeness of PR services and knowledge of protected characteristics are unknown, however are vital for the identification and resolution of health inequalities. This qualitative study explored HCPs understanding of protected characteristics and their perception of the inclusivity, representativeness and equitable benefit of their PR services.
Methods
Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted in person or via videoconferencing with HCPs involved in PR from two healthcare providers. Interviews were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.
Results
12 interviews were conducted with physiotherapists (n = 6), occupational therapists (n = 2), nurses (n = 2) and exercise physiologists (n = 2). Participants had a median (IRQ) age of 43 (13) and 75% (n = 9) were female. Four themes were generated. 1: ‘I don’t really know as much as I should’ [about protected characteristics]; 2: It’s uncomfortable collecting protected characteristics…; 3: ‘I don’t think [service users] are as representative as they could be’; 4: A conventional rehabilitation programme does not meet the needs of all.
Conclusions
This study highlighted several challenges in HCPs understanding of protected characteristics and the representativeness of PR that must be addressed to ensure equity. Strategies, to understand barriers in accessing PR that limit representativeness should be explored.
Journal Article
Quantifying the relative intensity of free-living physical activity: differences across age, association with mortality and clinical interpretation—an observational study
2025
ObjectivesTo describe age-related differences in the absolute and relative intensity of physical activity (PA) and associations with mortality.MethodsUK Biobank participants with accelerometer-assessed PA (mg) and fitness data (N=11 463; age: 43–76 years) were included. The intensity distribution of PA was expressed in absolute and relative terms. The outcome was mortality.ResultsPA volume (average acceleration) and absolute intensity were lower with increasing age (~−0.03 to −0.04 SD of mean value across all ages per year; p<0.001) but differences in relative intensity by age were markedly smaller in women (−0.003 SD; p<0.184) and men (−0.012 SD; p<0.001). Absolute intensity was higher in men, but relative intensity higher in women (p<0.001). Over a median (IQR) follow-up of 8.1 (7.5–8.6) years, 121 (2.4 per 1000-person-years) deaths occurred in women and 203 (5.0 per 1000-person-years) in men. Lower risk of mortality was observed for increasing absolute or relative intensity in women, but for absolute intensity only in men. In men, the lowest risk (HR 0.62, 95% CI 0.43, 0.91) was observed in those with high absolute intensity (80th centile), but low relative intensity (20th centile). Conversely, in women, the lowest risk was associated with high levels (80th centile) of both absolute and relative intensity (HR 0.59, 95% CI 0.41, 0.86).ConclusionAbsolute PA intensity dropped with age, while relative intensity was fairly stable. Associations between PA intensity and mortality suggest that prescribing intensity in absolute terms appears appropriate for men, while either absolute or relative terms may be appropriate for women.
Journal Article
24-hour accelerometry in COPD: Exploring physical activity, sedentary behavior, sleep and clinical characteristics
by
Kingsnorth, Andrew P
,
Singh, Sally J
,
Esliger, Dale W
in
Accelerometry
,
Actigraphy - instrumentation
,
Activity Cycles
2019
The constructs and interdependency of physical behaviors are not well described and the complexity of physical activity (PA) data analysis remains unexplored in COPD. This study examined the interrelationships of 24-hour physical behaviors and investigated their associations with participant characteristics for individuals with mild-moderate airflow obstruction and healthy control subjects.
Vigorous PA (VPA), moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA), light PA (LPA), stationary time (ST), average movement intensity (vector magnitude counts per minute), and sleep duration for 109 individuals with COPD and 135 healthy controls were obtained by wrist-worn accelerometry. Principal components analysis (PCA) examined interrelationships of physical behaviors to identify distinct behavioral constructs. Using the PCA component loadings, linear regressions examined associations with participant (+, positive correlation; -, negative correlation), and were compared between COPD and healthy control groups.
For both groups PCA revealed ST, LPA, and average movement intensity as distinct behavioral constructs to MVPA and VPA, labeled \"low-intensity movement\" and \"high-intensity movement,\" respectively. Sleep was also found to be its own distinct behavioral construct. Results from linear regressions supported the identification of distinct behavioral constructs from PCA. In COPD, low-intensity movement was associated with limitations with mobility (-), daily activities (-), health status (+), and body mass index (BMI) (-) independent of high-intensity movement and sleep. High-intensity movement was associated with age (-) and self-care limitations (-) independent of low-intensity movement and sleep. Sleep was associated with gender (0= female, 1= male; [-]), lung function (-), and percentage body fat (+) independent of low-intensity and high-intensity movement.
Distinct behavioral constructs comprising the 24-hour day were identified as \"low-intensity movement,\" \"high-intensity movement,\" and \"sleep\" with each construct independently associated with different participant characteristics. Future research should determine whether modifying these behaviors improves health outcomes in COPD.
Journal Article
A feasibility trial of pulmonary rehabilitation for patients with COPD in a low resource setting: Jaffna, Sri Lanka
by
Orme, Mark W.
,
Sooriyakanthan, Mathanki
,
Singh, Sally J.
in
Care and treatment
,
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
,
Clinical trials
2022
Background
Pulmonary rehabilitation is recommended for most patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Accordingly, the aim of this study was to explore the feasibility of devising a pulmonary rehabilitation program for patients with COPD in a low resource setting (Jaffna, Sri Lanka) and to observe its effects.
Methods
Non-randomized controlled feasibility trial of ambulatory patients with COPD attending the pulmonary outpatient clinic of the Jaffna Teaching Hospital, Northern Province, Sri Lanka. Age-matched patients were allocated alternatively to an intervention group or to a control group. Twice weekly, for six weeks, patients in the intervention group attended pulmonary rehabilitation sessions consisting of supervised stretching, aerobic and strengthening exercises, and patient-education. Before and at the conclusion of the study, all patients performed incremental shuttle walking test (ISWT), 6-min walk test (6MWT) and completed the Medical Research Council (MRC) dyspnea scale, COPD assessment test (CAT), chronic COPD questionnaire (CCQ), and hospital anxiety depression scale (HADS).
Results
204 patients with COPD (94% males) were identified at screening; 136 (66.7%) were eligible for pulmonary rehabilitation and 96 patients (47%) consented to participate. Of these, 54 patients (53 males) eventually participated in the study (42 patients were discouraged to participate by family members or friends); 40 patients (20 in the rehabilitation group and 20 patients in the control group) completed the study. Baseline characteristics of the intervention group and the control group were similar. 95% of patients in the intervention group adhered to regular home training exercises (self-reported diary). At post assessment, only the intervention group experienced clinically-meaningful improvements in symptoms and exercise capacity.
Conclusion
A simple and clinically beneficial pulmonary rehabilitation program for patients with COPD can be effectively implemented in a low resource setting. However, there is a need for educating patients and the local community on the benefits of pulmonary rehabilitation to enhance uptake.
Retrospective Trial Registration date and number: 16/04/2021, ISRCTN10069208.
Journal Article