Mulvaney Shelagh A, Ho Yun-Xian, Cala Cather M, Chen Qingxia, Nian Hui, Patterson Barron L, Johnson Kevin B
School of Nursing, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2013 Jul 17;15(7):e141. doi: 10.2196/jmir.2413.
Self-report is the most common method of measuring medication adherence but is influenced by recall error and response bias, and it typically does not provide insight into the causes of poor adherence. Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) of health behaviors using mobile phones offers a promising alternative to assessing adherence and collecting related data that can be clinically useful for adherence problem solving.
To determine the feasibility of using EMA via mobile phones to assess adolescent asthma medication adherence and identify contextual characteristics of adherence decision making.
We utilized a descriptive and correlational study design to explore a mobile method of symptom and adherence assessment using an interactive voice response system. Adolescents aged 12-18 years with a diagnosis of asthma and prescribed inhalers were recruited from an academic medical center. A survey including barriers to mobile phone use, the Illness Management Survey, and the Pediatric Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire were administered at baseline. Quantitative and qualitative assessment of asthma symptoms and adherence were conducted with daily calls to mobile phones for 1 month. The Asthma Control Test (ACT) was administered at 2 study time points: baseline and 1 month after baseline.
The sample consisted of 53 adolescents who were primarily African American (34/53, 64%) and female (31/53, 58%) with incomes US$40K/year or lower (29/53, 55%). The majority of adolescents (37/53, 70%) reported that they carried their phones with them everywhere, but only 47% (25/53) were able to use their mobile phone at school. Adolescents responded to an average of 20.1 (SD 8.1) of the 30 daily calls received (67%). Response frequency declined during the last week of the month (b=-0.29, P<.001) and was related to EMA-reported levels of rescue inhaler adherence (r= 0.33, P=.035). Using EMA, adolescents reported an average of 0.63 (SD 1.2) asthma symptoms per day and used a rescue inhaler an average of 70% of the time (SD 35%) when they experienced symptoms. About half (26/49, 53%) of the instances of nonadherence took place in the presence of friends. The EMA-measured adherence to rescue inhaler use correlated appropriately with asthma control as measured by the ACT (r=-0.33, P=.034).
Mobile phones provided a feasible method to assess asthma symptoms and adherence in adolescents. The EMA method was consistent with the ACT, a widely established measure of asthma control, and results provided valuable insights regarding the context of adherence decision making that could be used clinically for problem solving or as feedback to adolescents in a mobile or Web-based support system.
自我报告是测量药物依从性最常用的方法,但受回忆误差和反应偏差的影响,通常无法深入了解依从性差的原因。使用手机进行健康行为的生态瞬时评估(EMA)为评估依从性和收集相关数据提供了一种有前景的替代方法,这些数据在临床上有助于解决依从性问题。
确定通过手机使用EMA评估青少年哮喘药物依从性以及识别依从性决策的情境特征的可行性。
我们采用描述性和相关性研究设计,利用交互式语音应答系统探索一种评估症状和依从性的移动方法。从一家学术医疗中心招募了12 - 18岁诊断为哮喘且已开具吸入器处方的青少年。在基线时进行了一项包括手机使用障碍、疾病管理调查和儿童哮喘生活质量问卷的调查。通过每天拨打手机进行为期1个月的哮喘症状和依从性的定量和定性评估。在两个研究时间点进行哮喘控制测试(ACT):基线和基线后1个月。
样本包括53名青少年,他们主要是非裔美国人(34/53,64%),女性(31/53,58%),年收入4万美元或更低(29/53,55%)。大多数青少年(37/53,70%)报告他们随时随地都带着手机,但只有47%(25/53)的人能够在学校使用手机。青少年对收到的30次每日呼叫平均回复20.1次(标准差8.1)(67%)。在该月的最后一周回复频率下降(b = -0.29,P <.001),并且与EMA报告的急救吸入器依从性水平相关(r = 0.33,P =.035)。使用EMA,青少年报告每天平均有0.63次(标准差1.2)哮喘症状,并且在出现症状时使用急救吸入器的时间平均为70%(标准差35%)。约一半(26/49,53%)的不依从情况发生在有朋友在场时。EMA测量的急救吸入器使用依从性与ACT测量的哮喘控制情况适当相关(r = -0.33,P =.034)。
手机提供了一种评估青少年哮喘症状和依从性的可行方法。EMA方法与ACT(一种广泛使用的哮喘控制测量方法)一致,其结果为依从性决策的情境提供了有价值的见解,可在临床上用于解决问题或作为移动或基于网络的支持系统中给予青少年的反馈。