Skip to content
Study details
Enrolling now

Improving Adherence to Spinal Cord Injury Exercise Guidelines Using Smartphone Technology and E-coaching

Shirley Ryan AbilityLab
NCT IDNCT05424172ClinicalTrials.gov data as of Apr 2026
Target enrollment

50

Study length

about 3.8 years

Ages

18–80

Locations

1 site in IL

About this study

Researchers are testing whether using a smartphone app with e-coaching can help people with spinal cord injuries exercise more consistently. The trial will compare different ways of using the app, including a simple version and an interactive one that collects information about your activity levels to adjust your program. Participants who don't meet their exercise goals after 12 weeks may also receive e-coaching sessions.

Based on ClinicalTrials.gov records.

What participants do

  • 1.Participate in Stage-I, Group 1: Self monitoring using Non-interactive App
  • 2.Participate in Stage-I, Group 2: Self monitoring using Interactive App
  • 3.Participate in Stage-II, Groups 1a/2a: E-Coaching 1x per month
  • +1 more

Participation effort

Estimated from trial records. Details can vary by site.

Time + visits
Low6%
Logistics
Moderate50%

Logistics difficulty varies by site location and availability.

Trial highlights

Treatment details

Auto-extracted from trial records to preview treatments and outcomes.

Endpoints

Secondary: Change in Exercise Self-Efficacy from Baseline to 12 weeks, Change in Exercise Self-Efficacy from Baseline to 24 weeks, Change in Spinal Cord Injury-Quality of Life Scales from 12 to 24 Weeks, Change in Spinal Cord Injury-Quality of Life Scales from Baseline to 12 Weeks, Change in Spinal Cord Injury-Quality of Life Scales from Baseline to 24 Weeks

Procedures

monitoring

Body systems

Neurology