Tokyo, March 8 -- UMIN Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN-CTR) received information related to the study (UMIN000060859) titled 'Examination of changes in balance and attention function by implementing sensor games in day care service users' on March 6.

Study Type: Interventional

Study Design: Basic Design - Parallel Randomization - Randomized Blinding - Open -but assessor(s) are blinded Control - No treatment

Primary Sponsor: Institute - Fukushima Medical University School of Health Sciences

Condition: Condition - Day service users aged 65 or older Classification by malignancy - Others Genomic information - NO

Objective: Narrative objectives1 - This study targets day service users and aims to clarify whether there is a difference in effectiveness between supervised interaction by non-rehabilitation professionals using sensor games and regular rehabilitation intervention by rehabilitation professionals. Basic objectives2 - Efficacy

Intervention: Interventions/Control_1 - sensor games Interventions/Control_2 - sensor games

Eligibility: Age-lower limit - 45 years-old = Gender - Male and Female Key inclusion criteria - 1. Ages 45 to 80 at the time of consent 2. Currently attending day care services 3. Individuals who agreed to participate in this study Key exclusion criteria - 1. Those who have difficulty with verbal communication 2. Those who have previously participated in digital rehabilitation sensor games at least four times per month 3. Those who achieved perfect scores on the Mini-BEST test and Berg balance scale before intervention 4. Those who have difficulty walking and cannot perform the Timed Up and Go test Target Size - 34

Recruitment Status: Recruitment status - Open public recruiting Date of protocol fixation - 2025 Year 07 Month 18 Day Date of IRB - 2025 Year 07 Month 18 Day Anticipated trial start date - 2025 Year 07 Month 18 Day Last follow-up date - 2027 Year 03 Month 31 Day

To know more, visit https://center6.umin.ac.jp/cgi-open-bin/ctr_e/ctr_view.cgi?recptno=R000066836

Disclaimer: Curated by HT Syndication.