%0 Journal Article %A Hayley Rice %A Kylie Hill %A Robin Fowler %A Carol Watson %A Grant Waterer %A Megan Harrold %T Reduced Step Count and Clinical Frailty in Hospitalized Adults With Community-Acquired Pneumonia %D 2020 %R 10.4187/respcare.06992 %J Respiratory Care %P 455-463 %V 65 %N 4 %X BACKGROUND: In adults hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), increasing ward-based walking may reduce length of stay (LOS). There are few data to describe ward-based walking in this population. In adults hospitalized with CAP, we aimed to report variables of walking and non-walking time, to determine whether demographic or clinical variables influenced daily step count, and to determine whether daily step count influenced LOS.METHODS: Following admission, daily step count and variables related to walking and non-walking time were quantified using the StepWatch Activity Monitor. Details regarding demographics, clinical characteristics, clinical care, and LOS were extracted from the medical records and hospital electronic data systems. Frailty was calculated via the 7-point Clinical Frailty Scale; disease severity was measured via the CURB-65 score. Health care utilization at 30 d following discharge was measured via telephone interview.RESULTS: Two hundred participants completed the study, of whom 121 contributed ≥ 24 h of data from the StepWatch Activity Monitor. The median (interquartile range (IQR)) number of daily steps was 926 (457–1706). These were accumulated over 66 (41–121) min/d, with a usual bout duration of 3 (2–4) min and 1-min peak cadence of 56 (43–74) steps/min. An average of 93% (89–96) of waking hours was spent in non-walking time. In the multivariable model, increased frailty was retained as a predictor of lower step count (incidence rate ratio [IRR] 0.59, 95% CI 0.41–0.85). For every increase in 500 steps/d, LOS reduced by 11% (IRR 0.89, 95% CI 0.80–0.99).CONCLUSIONS: Subjects hospitalized with CAP did very little walking, most of which was accumulated in short bouts at a low intensity. Compared with subjects with mild frailty, those with moderate to severe frailty took 59% fewer steps per day. Those with a higher daily step count had a shorter LOS. %U https://rc.rcjournal.com/content/respcare/65/4/455.full.pdf