Healthcare (Aug 2022)

Digital Care Programs for Chronic Hip Pain: A Prospective Longitudinal Cohort Study

  • Dora Janela,
  • Fabíola Costa,
  • Anabela C. Areias,
  • Maria Molinos,
  • Robert G. Moulder,
  • Jorge Lains,
  • Virgílio Bento,
  • Justin K. Scheer,
  • Vijay Yanamadala,
  • Steven P. Cohen,
  • Fernando Dias Correia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10081595
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 1595

Abstract

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Chronic hip pain is a cause of disability worldwide. Digital interventions (DI) may promote access while providing proper management. This single-arm interventional study assesses the clinical outcomes and engagement of a completely remote multimodal DI in patients with chronic hip pain. This home-based DI consisted of exercise (with real-time biofeedback), education, and cognitive-behavioral therapy. Outcomes were calculated between baseline and program end, using latent growth curve analysis. Primary outcome was the Hip Disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS). Secondary outcomes were pain, intent to undergo surgery, mental health, productivity, patient engagement (exercise sessions frequency), and satisfaction. Treatment response was assessed using a 30% pain change cut-off. A completion rate of 74.2% (396/534), alongside high patient engagement (2.9 exercise sessions/week, SD 1.1) and satisfaction (8.7/10, SD 1.6) were observed. Significant improvements were observed across all HOOS sub-scales (14.7–26.8%, p p < 0.001). The high engagement and satisfaction reported after this DI, alongside the clinical outcome improvement, support the potential of remote care in the management of chronic hip conditions.

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