Brandt Lena R, Hidalgo Liliana, Diez-Canseco Francisco, Araya Ricardo, Mohr David C, Menezes Paulo R, Miranda J Jaime
CRONICAS Center of Excellence in Chronic Diseases, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru.
Centre for Global Mental Health and Primary Care Research, Health Service and Population Research, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
JMIR Ment Health. 2019 Jun 18;6(6):e11701. doi: 10.2196/11701.
Smartphone apps could constitute a cost-effective strategy to overcome health care system access barriers to mental health services for people in low- and middle-income countries.
The aim of this paper was to explore the patients' perspectives of CONEMO (Emotional Control, in Spanish: Control Emocional), a technology-driven, psychoeducational, and nurse-supported intervention delivered via a smartphone app aimed at reducing depressive symptoms in people with diabetes, hypertension or both who attend public health care centers, as well as the nurses' feedback about their role and its feasibility to be scaled up.
This study combines data from 2 pilot studies performed in Lima, Peru, between 2015 and 2016, to test the feasibility of CONEMO. Interviews were conducted with 29 patients with diabetes, hypertension or both with comorbid depressive symptoms who used CONEMO and 6 staff nurses who accompanied the intervention. Using a content analysis approach, interview notes from patient interviews were transferred to a digital format, coded, and categorized into 6 main domains: the perceived health benefit, usability, adherence, user satisfaction with the app, nurse's support, and suggestions to improve the intervention. Interviews with nurses were analyzed by the same approach and categorized into 4 domains: general feedback, evaluation of training, evaluation of study activities, and feasibility of implementing this intervention within the existing structures of health system.
Patients perceived improvement in their emotional health because of CONEMO, whereas some also reported better physical health. Many encountered some difficulties with using CONEMO, but resolved them with time and practice. However, the interactive elements of the app, such as short message service, android notifications, and pop-up messages were mostly perceived as challenging. Satisfaction with CONEMO was high, as was the self-reported adherence. Overall, patients evaluated the nurse accompaniment positively, but they suggested improvements in the technological training and an increase in the amount of contact. Nurses reported some difficulties in completing their tasks and explained that the CONEMO intervention activities competed with their everyday work routine.
Using a nurse-supported smartphone app to reduce depressive symptoms among people with chronic diseases is possible and mostly perceived beneficial by the patients, but it requires context-specific adaptations regarding the implementation of a task shifting approach within the public health care system. These results provide valuable information about user feedback for those building mobile health interventions for depression.
智能手机应用程序可能是一种具有成本效益的策略,可克服低收入和中等收入国家人们在获取心理健康服务方面面临的医疗保健系统障碍。
本文旨在探讨患者对CONEMO(西班牙语为“情绪控制”:Control Emocional)的看法,这是一种通过智能手机应用程序提供的技术驱动、心理教育且有护士支持的干预措施,旨在减轻前往公共医疗保健中心就诊的糖尿病、高血压患者或同时患有这两种疾病的患者的抑郁症状,以及护士对其角色的反馈及其扩大规模的可行性。
本研究结合了2015年至2016年在秘鲁利马进行的两项试点研究的数据,以测试CONEMO的可行性。对29名使用CONEMO的患有糖尿病、高血压或同时患有这两种疾病且伴有抑郁症状的患者以及6名参与干预的护士进行了访谈。采用内容分析方法,将患者访谈的笔记转换为数字格式、编码,并归类为6个主要领域:感知到的健康益处、可用性、依从性、对应用程序的用户满意度、护士的支持以及改进干预措施的建议。对护士的访谈采用相同方法进行分析,并归类为4个领域:总体反馈、培训评估、研究活动评估以及在现有卫生系统结构内实施该干预措施的可行性。
患者认为CONEMO改善了他们的情绪健康,而一些患者还报告说身体健康状况也有所改善。许多患者在使用CONEMO时遇到了一些困难,但随着时间的推移和实践逐渐解决了这些问题。然而,应用程序的互动元素,如短信服务、安卓通知和弹出消息,大多被认为具有挑战性。对CONEMO的满意度很高,自我报告的依从性也很高。总体而言,患者对护士的陪伴给予了积极评价,但他们建议改进技术培训并增加接触量。护士报告在完成任务时遇到了一些困难,并解释说CONEMO干预活动与他们的日常工作相冲突。
使用有护士支持的智能手机应用程序来减轻慢性病患者的抑郁症状是可行的,并且患者大多认为有益,但在公共医疗保健系统内实施任务转移方法需要根据具体情况进行调整。这些结果为那些构建抑郁症移动健康干预措施的人提供了有关用户反馈的有价值信息。