Piette John D, Marinec Nicolle, Janda Kathryn, Morgan Emily, Schantz Karolina, Yujra Amparo Clara Aruquipa, Pinto Bismarck, Soto José Marecelo Huayta, Janevic Mary, Aikens James E
1 Ann Arbor Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research , Ann Arbor, Michigan.
2 School of Public Health, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Telemed J E Health. 2016 Apr;22(4):261-8. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2015.0099. Epub 2015 Sep 9.
Patients' engagement in mobile health (m-health) interventions using interactive voice response (IVR) calls is less in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) than in industrialized ones. We conducted a study to determine whether automated telephone feedback to informal caregivers ("CarePartners") increased engagement in m-health support among diabetes and hypertension patients in Bolivia.
Patients with diabetes and/or hypertension were identified through ambulatory clinics affiliated with four hospitals. All patients enrolled with a CarePartner. Patients were randomized to weekly IVR calls including self-management questions and self-care education either alone ("standard m-health") or with automated feedback about health and self-care needs sent to their CarePartner after each IVR call ("m-health+CP").
The 72 participants included 39 with diabetes and 53 with hypertension, of whom 19 had ≤6 years of education. After 1,225 patient-weeks of attempted IVR assessments, the call completion rate was higher among patients randomized to m-health+CP compared with standard m-health (62.0% versus 44.9%; p < 0.047). CarePartner feedback more than tripled call completion rates among indigenous patients and patients with low literacy (p < 0.001 for both). M-health+CP patients were more likely to report excellent health via IVR (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 2.60; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.07, 6.32) and less likely to report days in bed due to illness (AOR = 0.42; 95% CI, 0.19, 0.91).
In this study we found that caregiver feedback increased engagement in m-health and may improve patients' health status relative to standard approaches. M-health+CP represents a scalable strategy for increasing the reach of self-management support in LMICs.
在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),患者参与使用交互式语音应答(IVR)呼叫的移动健康(m-健康)干预的程度低于工业化国家。我们开展了一项研究,以确定对非正式护理人员(“护理伙伴”)的自动电话反馈是否能提高玻利维亚糖尿病和高血压患者对m-健康支持的参与度。
通过四家医院附属的门诊诊所识别出糖尿病和/或高血压患者。所有患者均登记了一名护理伙伴。患者被随机分为两组,一组每周接受IVR呼叫,内容包括自我管理问题和自我护理教育(“标准m-健康”),另一组除上述内容外,每次IVR呼叫后还会向其护理伙伴发送有关健康和自我护理需求的自动反馈(“m-健康+护理伙伴”)。
72名参与者中,39名患有糖尿病,53名患有高血压,其中19名受教育年限≤6年。在进行了1225个患者周的IVR评估尝试后,随机分配到m-健康+护理伙伴组的患者的呼叫完成率高于标准m-健康组(62.0%对44.9%;p<0.047)。护理伙伴的反馈使土著患者和低识字率患者的呼叫完成率提高了两倍多(两者p均<0.001)。m-健康+护理伙伴组的患者更有可能通过IVR报告健康状况极佳(调整后的优势比[AOR]=2.60;95%置信区间[CI],1.07,6.32),且因疾病卧床天数的报告可能性较小(AOR=0.42;95%CI,0.19,0.91)。
在本研究中,我们发现护理人员的反馈提高了对m-健康的参与度,相对于标准方法,可能改善患者的健康状况。m-健康+护理伙伴代表了一种在低收入和中等收入国家扩大自我管理支持覆盖范围的可扩展策略。