A power-assisted exercise intervention in people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities living in a residential facility: a pilot randomised controlled trial

Author:

Bossink Leontien WM1,van der Putten Annette AJ1,Waninge Aly23,Vlaskamp Carla1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Special Needs Education and Youth Care, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands

2. Applied Sciences in Health Care and Nursing, Hanze University of Applied Sciences, Groningen, the Netherlands

3. Royal Dutch Visio De Brink, Vries, the Netherlands

Abstract

Objective: To assess the feasibility of conducting a randomised controlled trial to determine the effectiveness of a twenty-week power-assisted exercise intervention in people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities and to evaluate the potential beneficial effects of this intervention. Design: Pilot randomised controlled trial. Setting: A large-scale twenty-four-hour residential facility in the Netherlands. Subjects: Thirty-seven persons with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities. Intervention: Participants in the intervention group received a power-assisted exercise intervention three times a week for thirty minutes over a twenty-week period. Participants in the control group received care as usual. Main measures: Trial feasibility by recruitment process and outcomes completion rates; intervention feasibility by programme compliance rates; potential outcomes by functional abilities, alertness, body composition, muscle tone, oxygen saturation, cardiovascular fitness and quality of life. Results: Thirty-seven participants were recruited ( M age = 32.1, SD = 14.6) and were randomly allocated to intervention ( n = 19) and control ( n = 18) groups. Programme compliance rates ranged from 54.2% to 97.7% with a mean (SD) of 81.5% (13.4). Oxygen saturation significantly increased in the intervention group. Standardised effect sizes on the difference between groups in outcome varied between 0.02 and 0.62. Conclusions: The power-assisted exercise intervention and the trial design were feasible and acceptable to people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities living in a residential facility. This pilot study suggests that the intervention improves oxygen saturation, but further implementation with the aim of improving other outcomes should be considered with caution.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Rehabilitation,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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