Otis Marisa, Zhu Jack, Mustafa-Kutana Suleiman N, Bernier Angelina V, Ma Shum Julio, Soros Dupre Arlette A, Wang Monica L
Department of Community Health Sciences, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.
Division of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2020 May 1;4(5):e16262. doi: 10.2196/16262.
Mobile interventions hold promise as an intervention modality to engage children in improving diabetes self-management education, attitudes, and behaviors.
This pilot study aimed to explore the usability, acceptability, and feasibility of delivering a mobile diabetes educational tool to parent-child pairs in a clinical setting.
This mixed methods pilot study comprised two concurrent phases with differing study participants. Phase 1 used user testing interviews to collect qualitative data on the usability and acceptability of the tool. Phase 2 used a single-arm pre- and poststudy design to quantitatively evaluate the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the intervention. Study participants (English-speaking families with youth aged 5-14 years with insulin-dependent diabetes) were recruited from an urban hospital in Massachusetts, United States. In phase 1, parent-child pairs were invited to complete the intervention together and participate in 90-min user testing interviews assessing the tool's usability and acceptability. Interview transcripts were analyzed using a directed content analysis approach. In phase 2, parent-child pairs were invited to complete the intervention together in the clinical setting. Measures included parental and child knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors related to diabetes management (self-report surveys) and child hemoglobin A1c levels (medical record extractions); data were collected at baseline and 1-month follow-up. Pre- and postoutcomes were compared using paired t tests and the Fisher exact test.
A total of 11 parent-child pairs (N=22) participated in phase 1 of the study, and 10 parent-child pairs (N=20) participated in phase 2 of the study. Participants viewed the mobile educational tool as acceptable (high engagement and satisfaction with the layout, activities, and videos) and identified the areas of improvement for tool usability (duration, directions, and animation).
The findings from this pilot study suggest that the mobile educational tool is an informative, engaging, and feasible way to deliver diabetes self-management education to parents and children in an urban hospital setting. Data will inform future iterations of this mobile diabetes educational intervention to improve usability and test intervention efficacy.
移动干预作为一种干预方式,有望促使儿童参与改善糖尿病自我管理教育、态度和行为。
这项试点研究旨在探讨在临床环境中向亲子对提供移动糖尿病教育工具的可用性、可接受性和可行性。
这项混合方法试点研究包括两个同时进行的阶段,研究参与者不同。第1阶段使用用户测试访谈来收集关于该工具可用性和可接受性的定性数据。第2阶段使用单组前后研究设计来定量评估干预的可行性和初步效果。研究参与者(来自美国马萨诸塞州一家城市医院的、说英语的、家中有5 - 14岁胰岛素依赖型糖尿病青少年的家庭)。在第1阶段,邀请亲子对一起完成干预,并参加90分钟的用户测试访谈,评估该工具的可用性和可接受性。使用定向内容分析方法分析访谈记录。在第2阶段,邀请亲子对在临床环境中一起完成干预。测量指标包括与糖尿病管理相关的父母和孩子的知识、态度和行为(自我报告调查)以及孩子的糖化血红蛋白水平(病历提取);在基线和1个月随访时收集数据。使用配对t检验和Fisher精确检验比较前后结果。
共有11对亲子(N = 22)参与了研究的第1阶段,10对亲子(N = 20)参与了研究的第2阶段。参与者认为移动教育工具是可接受的(对布局、活动和视频的参与度和满意度高),并确定了工具可用性的改进领域(持续时间、说明和动画)。
这项试点研究的结果表明,移动教育工具是在城市医院环境中向父母和孩子提供糖尿病自我管理教育的一种信息丰富、引人入胜且可行的方式。数据将为这种移动糖尿病教育干预的未来迭代提供参考以提高可用性并测试干预效果。