Department of Health Services Research and Policy, Research School of Population Health, College of Health and Medicine, Australian National University, Mills Rd, Acton ACT 2601, Canberra, Australia.
Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, 31 Nanyang Link, Singapore, 637718, Singapore.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2020 Jul 7;20(1):151. doi: 10.1186/s12911-020-01173-3.
Recent studies increasingly examine social support for diabetes self-management delivered via mHealth. In contrast to previous studies examining social support as an outcome of technology use, or technology as a means for delivering social support, this paper argues that social support has an impact on the use of diabetes mHealth apps. Specifically, we postulate differences between the impact of healthcare professional versus non-professional (family/friends) support on mobile app use for diabetes self-management.
This research employed a triangulation of methods including exploratory semi-structured face-to-face interviews (N = 21, Study 1) and an online survey (N = 65, Study 2) with adult type 1 and type 2 diabetes patients. Thematic analysis (Study 1) was used to explore the relevance of social support (by professionals versus non-professionals) for diabetes app use. Binary logistic regression (Study 2) was applied to compare healthcare decision-making, healthcare-patient communication, and the support by the personal patient network as predictors of diabetes app use, complemented by other predictors from self-management and technology adoption theory.
The interviews (Study 1) demonstrated that (technology-supported) shared decision-making and supportive communication by healthcare professionals depended on their medical specialty. The personal patient network was perceived as either facilitating or hindering the use of mHealth for self-management. Binary logistic regression (Study 2) showed that the physician specialty significantly predicted the use of diabetes apps, with supervision by diabetes specialists increasing the likelihood of app use (as opposed to general practitioners). Additionally, specialist care positively related to a higher chance of shared decision-making and better physician-patient communication. The support by the personal patient network predicted diabetes app use in the opposite direction, with less family/friend support increasing the likelihood of app use.
The results emphasize the relevance of support by healthcare professionals and by the patient network for diabetes app use and disclose differences from the existing literature. In particular, the use of diabetes apps may increase in the absence of social support by family or friends (e.g., compensation for lack of support), and may decrease when such support is high (e.g., no perceived need to use technology).
最近的研究越来越多地考察通过移动健康(mHealth)提供的糖尿病自我管理的社会支持。与以前研究技术使用的社会支持作为结果,或技术作为提供社会支持的手段不同,本文认为社会支持对糖尿病 mHealth 应用程序的使用有影响。具体来说,我们假设医疗保健专业人员与非专业人员(家人/朋友)支持对移动应用程序用于糖尿病自我管理的影响之间存在差异。
这项研究采用了包括探索性半结构化面对面访谈(N=21,研究 1)和糖尿病 1 型和 2 型成年患者在线调查(N=65,研究 2)在内的方法的三角测量。主题分析(研究 1)用于探讨社会支持(由专业人员和非专业人员提供)与糖尿病应用程序使用的相关性。二元逻辑回归(研究 2)用于比较医疗保健决策、医患沟通以及患者个人网络的支持作为糖尿病应用程序使用的预测指标,补充了自我管理和技术采用理论的其他预测指标。
访谈(研究 1)表明(技术支持)共享决策和医疗保健专业人员的支持取决于他们的医学专业。患者个人网络被认为促进或阻碍了 mHealth 在自我管理中的使用。二元逻辑回归(研究 2)表明,医生的专业显著预测了糖尿病应用程序的使用,糖尿病专家的监督增加了应用程序使用的可能性(与全科医生相反)。此外,专科护理与共享决策和更好的医患沟通的机会呈正相关。患者个人网络的支持则相反地预测了糖尿病应用程序的使用,家庭/朋友的支持较少增加了应用程序使用的可能性。
研究结果强调了医疗保健专业人员和患者网络支持对糖尿病应用程序使用的重要性,并揭示了与现有文献的差异。特别是,在缺乏家庭或朋友的社会支持(例如,缺乏支持的补偿)的情况下,糖尿病应用程序的使用可能会增加,而当这种支持较高时(例如,没有使用技术的需求),使用可能会减少。