Department of Healthcare Policy & Research, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York.
Department of Biomedical Informatics, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2020 Jun;68(6):1313-1318. doi: 10.1111/jgs.16403. Epub 2020 Mar 10.
Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) measures can monitor patients with chronic illnesses outside of healthcare settings. Unfortunately, few applications that collect electronic PROMIS measures are designed using inclusive design principles that ensure wide accessibility and usability, thus limiting use by older adults with chronic illnesses. Our aim was to establish the feasibility of using an inclusively designed mobile application tailored to older adults to report PROMIS measures by examining (1) PROMIS scores collected with the application, (2) patient-reported usability of the application, and (3) differences in usability by age.
Cross-sectional feasibility study.
Inpatient and outpatient cardiac units at an urban academic medical center.
A total of 168 English- and Spanish-speaking older adults with heart failure.
Participants used an inclusively designed mobile application to self-report PROMIS measures.
Eleven PROMIS Short-Form questionnaires (Anxiety, Ability to Participate in Social Roles and Activities, Applied Cognition-Abilities, Depression, Emotional Distress-Anger, Fatigue, Global Mental Health, Global Physical Health; Pain Interference, Physical Function, Sleep Disturbance), and a validated health technology usability survey measuring Perceived Ease-of-Use and Usefulness of the application.
Overall, 27% of participants were between 65 and 74 years of age, 10% were 75 years or older, 63% were male, 32% were white, and 96% had two or more medical conditions. There was no missing PROMIS data, and mean PROMIS scores showed the greatest burden of pain, fatigue, and physical function in the sample. Usability scores were high and not associated with age (Perceived Ease-of-Use P = .77; Perceived Usefulness P = .91).
It is feasible for older adults to use an inclusively designed application to report complete PROMIS data with high perceived usability. To ensure data completeness and the opportunity to study multiple domains of physical, mental, and social health, future work should use inclusive design principles for applications collecting PROMIS measures among older adults. J Am Geriatr Soc 68:1313-1318, 2020.
患者报告结局测量信息系统(PROMIS)测量可以在医疗保健环境之外监测慢性病患者。遗憾的是,很少有收集电子 PROMIS 测量值的应用程序是使用包容性设计原则设计的,这些原则确保了广泛的可及性和可用性,从而限制了患有慢性病的老年人的使用。我们的目的是通过检查(1)应用程序收集的 PROMIS 分数,(2)患者对应用程序的报告可用性,以及(3)年龄差异对可用性的影响,来确定专门为老年人设计的包容性移动应用程序报告 PROMIS 测量值的可行性。
横断面可行性研究。
城市学术医疗中心的住院和门诊心脏科。
共有 168 名英语和西班牙语的心力衰竭老年患者。
参与者使用包容性设计的移动应用程序自行报告 PROMIS 测量值。
11 个 PROMIS 短式问卷(焦虑、参与社会角色和活动的能力、应用认知能力、抑郁、情绪困扰-愤怒、疲劳、整体心理健康、整体身体健康;疼痛干扰、身体功能、睡眠障碍),以及一项验证性健康技术可用性调查,用于衡量应用程序的易用性和有用性。
总体而言,27%的参与者年龄在 65 至 74 岁之间,10%的参与者年龄在 75 岁或以上,63%的参与者为男性,32%为白人,96%的参与者有两种或两种以上的疾病。没有缺失的 PROMIS 数据,平均 PROMIS 分数显示出样本中最大的疼痛、疲劳和身体功能负担。可用性评分较高,与年龄无关(感知易用性 P =.77;感知有用性 P =.91)。
老年人使用包容性设计应用程序报告完整的 PROMIS 数据具有较高的感知可用性,这是可行的。为了确保数据的完整性并为研究身体、心理和社会健康的多个领域提供机会,未来的工作应该使用包容性设计原则为收集老年人 PROMIS 测量值的应用程序。美国老年学会杂志 68:1313-1318,2020 年。