TY - JOUR T1 - The Hospital to Home study (H2H): smartwatch technology-enabled rehabilitation following hip fracture in older adults, a feasibility non-randomised trial JF - Future Healthcare Journal JO - Future Healthc J SP - 14 LP - 20 DO - 10.7861/fhj.2022-0101 VL - 10 IS - 1 AU - Kalon Hewage AU - Samuel Fosker AU - Todd Leckie AU - Richard Venn AU - Anna-Carolina Gonçalves AU - Christina Koulouglioti AU - Luke E Hodgson Y1 - 2023/03/01 UR - http://www.rcpjournals.org/content/10/1/14.abstract N2 - Introduction Hip fractures are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. This study assessed the feasibility of smartwatches supporting rehabilitation post-surgical fixation.Methods This UK-based non-randomised intervention study recruited patients who had sustained a hip fracture (age ≥65 and Abbreviated Mental Test Score ≥8/10), following surgical fixation, at one hospital to the intervention group, and at a second hospital to a usual care group. The intervention group received a smartwatch (Fitbit Charge 4) and app (CUSH Health©). Feasibility measures included retention and completion of outcome measures.Results Between November 2020 and November 21, 66 participants were recruited (median age 78 (IQR 74–84)). The intervention cohort were younger, with no significant differences in frailty or multi-morbidity between the cohorts. Hospital stay was shorter in the intervention cohort (10 days (7–16) versus 12 (10–18), p=0.05). There were 15 falls-related readmissions in the control cohort, including 11 fractures, with none in the intervention cohort (p=0.016). In the intervention group, median daily step counts increased from 477 (320–697) in hospital, to 931 (505–1238) 1 week post-discharge, to 5,352 (3,552–7,944) at 12-weeks (p=0.001). Of the intervention cohort, 12 withdrew.Conclusion This study found that smartwatch-supported rehabilitation was feasible in this cohort. A significant proportion of patients either chose not to participate or withdrew; such a decrease in participants must be addressed to avoid digital exclusion. Falls and fracture-related readmissions were more frequent at the control site compared with the intervention site. ER -