Bowman Cassandra, Lunyera Joseph, Alkon Aviel, Boulware L Ebony, St Clair Russell Jennifer, Riley Jennie, Fink Jeffrey C, Diamantidis Clarissa
Division of General Internal Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States.
The National Kidney Foundation, Washington, DC, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2020 May 28;4(5):e16137. doi: 10.2196/16137.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a health condition that threatens patient safety; however, few interventions provide patient-centered education about kidney-specific safety hazards.
We sought to develop and test the usability of a mobile tablet-based educational tool designed to promote patient awareness of relevant safety topics in CKD.
We used plain language principles to develop content for the educational tool, targeting four patient-actionable safety objectives that are relevant for individuals with CKD. These four objectives included avoidance of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs); hypoglycemia awareness (among individuals with diabetes); temporary cessation of certain medications during acute volume depletion to prevent acute kidney injury (ie, "sick day protocol"); and contrast dye risk awareness. Our teaching strategies optimized human-computer interaction and content retention using audio, animation, and clinical vignettes to reinforce themes. For example, using a vignette of a patient with CKD with pain and pictures of common NSAIDs, participants were asked "Which of the following pain medicines are safe for Mr. Smith to take for his belly pain?" Assessment methods consisted of preknowledge and postknowledge surveys, with provision of correct responses and explanations. Usability testing of the tablet-based tool was performed among 12 patients with any stage of CKD, and program tasks were rated upon completion as no error, noncritical error (self-corrected), or critical error (needing assistance).
The 12 participants in this usability study were predominantly 65 years of age or older (n=7, 58%) and female (n=7, 58%); all participants owned a mobile device and used it daily. Among the 725 total tasks that the participants completed, there were 31 noncritical errors (4.3%) and 15 critical errors (2.1%); 1 participant accounted for 30 of the total errors. Of the 12 participants, 10 (83%) easily completed 90% or more of their tasks. Most participants rated the use of the tablet as very easy (n=7, 58%), the activity length as "just right" (rather than too long or too short) (n=10, 83%), and the use of clinical vignettes as helpful (n=10, 83%); all participants stated that they would recommend this activity to others. The median rating of the activity was 8 on a scale of 1 to 10 (where 10 is best). We incorporated all participant recommendations into the final version of the educational tool.
A tablet-based patient safety educational tool is acceptable and usable by individuals with CKD. Future studies leveraging iterations of this educational tool will explore its impact on health outcomes in this high-risk population.
慢性肾脏病(CKD)是一种威胁患者安全的健康状况;然而,很少有干预措施能提供以患者为中心的关于肾脏特定安全风险的教育。
我们试图开发并测试一种基于移动平板电脑的教育工具的可用性,该工具旨在提高患者对CKD相关安全主题的认识。
我们运用通俗易懂的原则为教育工具编写内容,针对与CKD患者相关的四个可采取患者行动的安全目标。这四个目标包括避免使用非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs);低血糖意识(糖尿病患者);在急性容量耗竭期间暂时停用某些药物以预防急性肾损伤(即“患病日方案”);以及造影剂风险意识。我们的教学策略利用音频、动画和临床案例来强化主题,从而优化人机交互和内容留存。例如,通过展示一位患有CKD且伴有疼痛的患者的案例以及常见NSAIDs的图片,询问参与者“以下哪种止痛药对史密斯先生的腹痛是安全的?”评估方法包括知识前测和知识后测,并提供正确答案及解释。在12名处于任何CKD阶段的患者中对基于平板电脑的工具进行可用性测试,完成程序任务后根据有无错误、非关键错误(自行纠正)或关键错误(需要协助)进行评分。
这项可用性研究中的12名参与者主要为65岁及以上(n = 7,58%)且为女性(n = 7,58%);所有参与者都拥有移动设备且每天使用。在参与者完成的总共725项任务中,有31项非关键错误(4.3%)和15项关键错误(2.1%);1名参与者占总错误的30项。在12名参与者中,10名(83%)轻松完成了90%或更多的任务。大多数参与者认为使用平板电脑非常容易(n = 7,58%),活动时长“恰到好处”(而非过长或过短)(n = 10,83%),使用临床案例很有帮助(n = 10,83%);所有参与者表示他们会向他人推荐这项活动。该活动的中位数评分为8分(满分10分,10分为最佳)。我们将所有参与者的建议纳入教育工具的最终版本。
基于平板电脑的患者安全教育工具对于CKD患者是可接受且可用的。未来利用该教育工具迭代进行的研究将探索其对这一高危人群健康结局的影响。