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Consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: Benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic

BACKGROUND: Although speech-language therapy (SLT) is proven to be beneficial to recovery of post-stroke aphasia, delivering sufficiently high amounts of dosage remains a problem in real-world clinical practice. Self-managed SLT was introduced to solve the problem. Previous research showed in a 10-w...

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Autores principales: Liu, Hantian, Cordella, Claire, Ishwar, Prakash, Betke, Margrit, Kiran, Swathi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10126684/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37114182
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1095110
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author Liu, Hantian
Cordella, Claire
Ishwar, Prakash
Betke, Margrit
Kiran, Swathi
author_facet Liu, Hantian
Cordella, Claire
Ishwar, Prakash
Betke, Margrit
Kiran, Swathi
author_sort Liu, Hantian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although speech-language therapy (SLT) is proven to be beneficial to recovery of post-stroke aphasia, delivering sufficiently high amounts of dosage remains a problem in real-world clinical practice. Self-managed SLT was introduced to solve the problem. Previous research showed in a 10-week period, increased dosage frequency could lead to better performance, however, it is uncertain if dosage still affects performance over a longer period of practice time and whether gains can be seen following practice over several months. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to evaluate data from a health app (Constant Therapy) to investigate the relationship between dosage amount and improvements following a 30-week treatment period. Two cohorts of users were analyzed. One was comprised of patients with a consistent average weekly dosage amount and the other cohort was comprised of users whose practice had higher variability. METHODS: We conducted two analyses with two cohorts of post-stroke patients who used Constant Therapy. The first cohort contains 537 “consistent” users, while the second cohort contains 2,159. The 30-week practice period was split into three consecutive 10-week practice windows to calculate average dosage amount. In each 10-week practice period, patients were grouped by their average dosage into low (0–15 min/week), medium (15–40 min/week) and moderate dosage (greater than 40 min/week) groups. Linear mixed-effects models were employed to evaluate if dosage amount was a significant factor affecting performance. Pairwise comparison was also applied to evaluate the slope difference between groups. RESULTS: For the consistent cohort, medium (β = .002, t(17,700) = 7.64, P < .001) and moderate (β = .003, t(9,297) = 7.94, P < .001) dosage groups showed significant improvement compared to the low dosage group. The moderate group also showed greater improvement compared to the medium group. For the variable cohort in analysis 2, the same trend was shown in the first two 10-week windows, however, in weeks 21–30, the difference was insignificant between low and medium groups (β = .001, t = 1.76, P = .078). CONCLUSIONS: This study showed a higher dosage amount is related to greater therapy outcomes in over 6 months of digital self-managed therapy. It also showed that regardless of the exact pattern of practice, self-managed SLT leads to significant and sustained performance gains.
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spelling pubmed-101266842023-04-26 Consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: Benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic Liu, Hantian Cordella, Claire Ishwar, Prakash Betke, Margrit Kiran, Swathi Front Digit Health Digital Health BACKGROUND: Although speech-language therapy (SLT) is proven to be beneficial to recovery of post-stroke aphasia, delivering sufficiently high amounts of dosage remains a problem in real-world clinical practice. Self-managed SLT was introduced to solve the problem. Previous research showed in a 10-week period, increased dosage frequency could lead to better performance, however, it is uncertain if dosage still affects performance over a longer period of practice time and whether gains can be seen following practice over several months. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to evaluate data from a health app (Constant Therapy) to investigate the relationship between dosage amount and improvements following a 30-week treatment period. Two cohorts of users were analyzed. One was comprised of patients with a consistent average weekly dosage amount and the other cohort was comprised of users whose practice had higher variability. METHODS: We conducted two analyses with two cohorts of post-stroke patients who used Constant Therapy. The first cohort contains 537 “consistent” users, while the second cohort contains 2,159. The 30-week practice period was split into three consecutive 10-week practice windows to calculate average dosage amount. In each 10-week practice period, patients were grouped by their average dosage into low (0–15 min/week), medium (15–40 min/week) and moderate dosage (greater than 40 min/week) groups. Linear mixed-effects models were employed to evaluate if dosage amount was a significant factor affecting performance. Pairwise comparison was also applied to evaluate the slope difference between groups. RESULTS: For the consistent cohort, medium (β = .002, t(17,700) = 7.64, P < .001) and moderate (β = .003, t(9,297) = 7.94, P < .001) dosage groups showed significant improvement compared to the low dosage group. The moderate group also showed greater improvement compared to the medium group. For the variable cohort in analysis 2, the same trend was shown in the first two 10-week windows, however, in weeks 21–30, the difference was insignificant between low and medium groups (β = .001, t = 1.76, P = .078). CONCLUSIONS: This study showed a higher dosage amount is related to greater therapy outcomes in over 6 months of digital self-managed therapy. It also showed that regardless of the exact pattern of practice, self-managed SLT leads to significant and sustained performance gains. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-04-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10126684/ /pubmed/37114182 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1095110 Text en © 2023 Liu, Cordella, Ishwar, Betke and Kiran. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Digital Health
Liu, Hantian
Cordella, Claire
Ishwar, Prakash
Betke, Margrit
Kiran, Swathi
Consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: Benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic
title Consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: Benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic
title_full Consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: Benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic
title_fullStr Consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: Benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic
title_full_unstemmed Consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: Benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic
title_short Consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: Benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic
title_sort consistent long-term practice leads to consistent improvement: benefits of self-managed therapy for language and cognitive deficits using a digital therapeutic
topic Digital Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10126684/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37114182
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1095110
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