Singing for lung health following completion of pulmonary rehabilitation: feasibility of a randomised controlled trial
Adam Lewis, Peter Jung, Parris Williams, Jennifer Steinmann, Karen A Ingram, Noah Longley, Puja Trivedi, Stuart Clarke, Helen Lammin, George Edwards, Maria Koulopoulou, Arun Sureshkumar, Anna Moore, Paul E Pfeffer, Leanne Reardon, Kim Sorley, Jarvis Kenman, Brendan DeLuca

TL;DR
This study explores whether singing groups can help maintain the benefits of pulmonary rehabilitation for people with chronic lung diseases.
Contribution
The study evaluates the feasibility of a randomized trial on singing for lung health after pulmonary rehabilitation.
Findings
64 participants were recruited with high completion rates for both the singing and control groups.
Participants and clinicians expressed enthusiasm for a larger trial based on positive experiences.
Suggestions for improvements included recruitment strategies and intervention structure.
Abstract
Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is a highly effective intervention for people with chronic respiratory disease; however, it is not known how best to sustain its benefits. Clinical trials are needed to establish if participation in singing for lung health (SLH) groups following PR will improve health-related quality of life, healthcare utilisation and exercise capacity compared with usual care. A feasibility study would help to guide development of these trials. In a multicentre, mixed-methods randomised controlled feasibility trial, PR participants at four sites were prescreened at baseline assessment. An SLH taster session was included routinely as part of the PR programmes. Eligible PR completers were invited to take part in the trial and randomised to usual care or a 12-week SLH course. Feasibility outcomes included recruitment rate, intervention compliance (at least 8/12 sessions)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research · Delphi Technique in Research · Respiratory and Cough-Related Research
