Design and Delivery Preferences for Exercise Intervention in People With Spinal Cord Injury

General health
Online since 19 October 2024, updated 381 days ago

About this trial

This research study aims to explore people's understanding of physical activity behavior and perceptions of what a physical activity program should include for supporting initiation and continuous par...

Included participants

Gender
All
Age
≥ 18 years
Injury level
C1 - S5
  • Severity (AIS)?
  • Time since injury
    All
    Healthy volunteers
    No
    C1-S5

    What’s involved

    Type

    Observational

    Details

    Aim 1. To explore individual preferences and needs that are related to engaging in a physical activity behavior using both qualitative and quantitative approaches. The identification of attributes will be achieved through (a) qualitative interviews of 30 adults living with SCI, (b) expert opinion of 10 healthcare professionals who have at least 5 years of work experience with SCI patients and in the field of SCI research, and (c) a rapid review of literature reporting on preferred design, equipment, and/or delivery methods for physical activity/exercise programs for people with SCI. For the qualitative approach, we will use semi-structured, one-on-one interviews. Using deductive content analysis, we will generate participant-informed categories that aligned with the "what, when, where, and who" of exercise programs for people with SCI to develop an initial DCE survey. Participants who take part in this study will engage in two one-on-one interviews that last approximately 1 hour each, depending on how much information is shared with the researcher. The interview will be conducted by the lead researcher via phone or video conference call. The interview will be audio-recorded, which will later be transcribed. The interview will ask questions about your interests, preferences, and wants for a physical activity program that supports initiation and long-term participation. The information shared during the interview will be used to create a preference survey, and the interviewed participants will be contacted again to complete the developed survey and a second interview to see whether the survey fully covered the choices of their needs and wants. Aim 2. To develop and refine a quantitative DCE survey that contains essential attributes and preference levels for physical activity participation. The developed initial DCE from Aim 1 will be further refined through the survey responses and feedback from the interviewed participants with SCI as well as iterative discussions with the interviewed healthcare professionals. The evaluation criteria will follow the DCE design guidelines, such as the clarity of the attributes, attribute descriptions, and preference levels; redundancy of attributes and levels defined; and level of burden. Aim 3. 3-1. To examine which attributes and preference levels are essential and more likely to be accepted for increasing participation in a physical activity intervention. The developed and refined DCE from Aim 1 and 2 will be pilot tested among 100 people with SCI, who were not involved in the qualitative interview and survey refinement processes. Using conjoint analysis techniques, we will develop prediction models based on the possible combinations of attributes and levels (e.g., 24 combinations = 3 levels of "what" x 2 of "when" x 2 of "where" x 2 of "who"). 3-2. To examine whether these preferences vary by participants' personal and clinical characteristics, such as age, functional level, residential area (urban vs. rural), and self-reported physical activity and motivational readiness to physical activity behavior change (pre-intenders, intenders, actors). Hypothesis: Adults with SCI who are currently meeting/exceeding physical activity guidelines (actors) will choose a self-guided physical activity program over a supervised, instructor-led program. Adults with SCI who have a high level of self-regulatory skills (goal setting and planning) will choose a self-guided physical activity program over a supervised, instructor-led program.

    Potential benefits

    Main benefits

    General health

    Additional benefits

    Good to know: Potential benefits are defined as outcomes that are being measured during and/or after the trial.

    Wings for Life supports SCITrialsFinder

    Wings for Life has proudly initiated, led and funded the new version of the SCI Trials Finder website. Wings for Life aims to find a cure for spinal cord injuries. The not-for-profit foundation funds world-class scientific research and clinical trials around the globe.

    Learn more


    • Trial recruitment status
    • Active
    • Trial start date
    • 27 Aug 2024
    • Organisation
    • University of Alabama at Birmingham
    • Trial recruitment status
    • Active
    • Trial start date
    • 27 Aug 2024
    • Organisation
    • University of Alabama at Birmingham

    Wings for Life supports SCITrialsFinder

    Wings for Life has proudly initiated, led and funded the new version of the SCI Trials Finder website. Wings for Life aims to find a cure for spinal cord injuries. The not-for-profit foundation funds world-class scientific research and clinical trials around the globe.

    Learn more