Adu Mary D, Malabu Usman H, Callander Emily J, Malau-Aduli Aduli Eo, Malau-Aduli Bunmi S
College of Medicine and Dentistry, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia.
Australian Institute of Tropical Health and Medicine, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2018 Jun 21;6(6):e10115. doi: 10.2196/10115.
There is increased research interest in the use of mobile phone apps to support diabetes management. However, there are divergent views on what constitute the minimum standards for inclusion in the development of mobile phone apps. Mobile phone apps require an evidence-based approach to development which will consequently impact on their effectiveness. Therefore, comprehensive information on developmental considerations could help designers and researchers to develop innovative and effective patient-centered self-management mobile phone apps for diabetes patients.
This systematic review examined the developmental considerations adopted in trials that engaged mobile phone applications for diabetes self-management.
A comprehensive search strategy was implemented across 5 electronic databases; Medline, Scopus, Social Science Citation Index, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINALHL) and supplemented by reference list from identified studies. Study quality was evaluated using the Joanna Briggs Critical appraisal checklist for trials. Information on developmental factors (health behavioral theory, functionality, pilot testing, user and clinical expert involvements, data privacy and app security) were assessed across experimental studies using a template developed for the review.
A total of 11 studies (10 randomized controlled trials and 1 quasi-experimental trial) that fitted the inclusion criteria were identified. All the included studies had the functionality of self-monitoring of blood glucose. However, only some of them included functions for data analytics (7/11, 63.6%), education (6/11, 54.5%) and reminder (6/11, 54.5%). There were 5/11(45.5%) studies with significantly improved glycosylated hemoglobin in the intervention groups where educational functionality was present in the apps used in the 5 trials. Only 1 (1/11, 9.1%) study considered health behavioral theory and user involvement, while 2 (2/11, 18.1%) other studies reported the involvement of clinical experts in the development of their apps. There were 4 (4/11, 36.4%) studies which referred to data security and privacy considerations during their app development while 7 (7/12, 63.6%) studies provided information on pilot testing of apps before use in the full trial. Overall, none of the studies provided information on all developmental factors assessed in the review.
There is a lack of elaborate and detailed information in the literature regarding the factors considered in the development of apps used as interventions for diabetes self-management. Documentation and inclusion of such vital information will foster a transparent and shared decision-making process that will ultimately lead to the development of practical and user-friendly self-management apps that can enhance the quality of life for diabetes patients.
利用手机应用程序来支持糖尿病管理的研究兴趣日益增加。然而,对于手机应用程序开发中纳入的最低标准构成存在不同观点。手机应用程序需要基于证据的开发方法,这将因此影响其有效性。因此,关于开发考量的全面信息可以帮助设计师和研究人员为糖尿病患者开发创新且有效的以患者为中心的自我管理手机应用程序。
本系统评价考察了在使用手机应用程序进行糖尿病自我管理的试验中所采用的开发考量。
在5个电子数据库(Medline、Scopus、社会科学引文索引、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库以及护理与健康照护文献累积索引(CINALHL))中实施全面的检索策略,并辅以已识别研究的参考文献列表。使用Joanna Briggs试验批判性评价清单对研究质量进行评估。使用为该评价制定的模板,在实验研究中评估关于开发因素(健康行为理论、功能、预试验、用户和临床专家参与、数据隐私和应用程序安全性)的信息。
共识别出11项符合纳入标准的研究(10项随机对照试验和1项半实验性试验)。所有纳入研究均具有血糖自我监测功能。然而,其中只有一些研究包括数据分析(7/11,63.6%)、教育(6/11,54.5%)和提醒(6/11,54.5%)功能。在5项试验中使用的应用程序具有教育功能的干预组中,有5/11(45.5%)的研究糖化血红蛋白有显著改善。只有1项(1/11,9.1%)研究考虑了健康行为理论和用户参与,而另外2项(2/11,18.1%)研究报告了临床专家参与其应用程序的开发。有4项(4/1, 36.4%)研究在其应用程序开发过程中提及了数据安全和隐私考量,而7项(7/12,63.6%)研究提供了在全面试验使用前应用程序预试验的信息。总体而言,没有一项研究提供了关于本评价中评估的所有开发因素的信息。
关于用作糖尿病自我管理干预措施的应用程序开发中所考虑因素的文献,缺乏详尽和详细的信息。记录并纳入这些重要信息将促进透明且共享的决策过程,最终将导致开发出实用且用户友好的自我管理应用程序,从而提高糖尿病患者的生活质量。