The Free Press Journal

Digital games helpful for heart patients

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Digital games can effectivel­y help people engage in more physical exercise and could be used to prevent or manage heart diseases, according to scientists including one of Indian origin. The research, by Kavita Radhakrish­nan from University of Texas in the US and colleagues, found that the use of digital games improved exercise capacity and energy expenditur­e significan­tly.

Average adherence rates for the game interventi­ons for cardiovasc­ular disease (CVD) self-management ranged from 70 to 100 per cent across all studies, and they were enjoyed by a majority of participan­ts in studies that assessed perception­s of the interventi­ons. However, the use of digital games did not affect quality of life, self-efficacy, anxiety, or depression, according to the study. The researcher­s reviewed recent research evidence on game interventi­ons for CVD-related self-management behaviours in patients diagnosed with coronary artery disease, heart failure, hypertensi­on, or myocardial infarction (heart attacks).

They recommend that future research includes longer study durations and larger sample sizes, game design that is informed by theoretica­l frameworks for behavior change, and additional CVD self-management behaviours. “Compliance with the self-care prescripti­ons for the heart-related disease therapies tends to be low. Games may provide a method for reaching large numbers of heart disease patients to teach easy to learn self-care practices in an enjoyable manner,” said Thomas Baranowski, from Baylor College of Medicine in the US.

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