Department of Library & Information Science, Sookmyung Women's University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Institute for Software Research School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Health Info Libr J. 2020 Sep;37(3):204-215. doi: 10.1111/hir.12300. Epub 2020 Mar 6.
Activity trackers are becoming increasingly popular, but patients often hesitate to share the data from such devices with their health care providers. Researchers have shown that sharing everyday health data with physicians can foster greater patient engagement.
This research is intended to investigate activity tracker users' decisions regarding the sharing of their activity tracker data with physicians, as well as to build a stage based framework for improving patient engagement by fostering such data sharing.
Qualitative analysis of interview records of 12 adults, who had used Fitbit activity tracking devices for up to two years, identifying emotions and experiences surrounding their tendencies to share physical exercise data with a physician.
This research used the subjects' emotions and considerations regarding the decision over whether to share exercise data with physicians to create a stage based framework with three stages: cognisance, tangible evidence and supportive feedback.
The tendency to progress towards three stages with greater patient-physician engagement appears to increase with health risk profile and with reduced data privacy concerns. This framework contributes to ongoing discussions about establishing patient-practitioner engagement, based around patients' shared personal data collection.
活动追踪器越来越受欢迎,但患者往往不愿与他们的医疗保健提供者分享这些设备的数据。研究人员已经表明,与医生分享日常健康数据可以促进患者更好地参与治疗。
本研究旨在调查活动追踪器用户关于与医生分享其活动追踪器数据的决策,并通过促进这种数据共享,建立一个基于阶段的框架来提高患者的参与度。
对 12 名成年人的访谈记录进行定性分析,这些成年人使用 Fitbit 活动跟踪设备长达两年,确定他们与医生分享体育锻炼数据的倾向所涉及的情绪和体验。
本研究利用研究对象在是否与医生分享运动数据方面的情绪和考虑,创建了一个基于三个阶段的框架:认知、有形证据和支持性反馈。
随着健康风险状况的增加和数据隐私担忧的减少,与医生更积极地参与治疗的趋势似乎会朝着三个阶段发展。该框架有助于围绕患者共享的个人数据收集,就建立医患参与度展开持续讨论。