Bashi Nazli, Varnfield Marlien, Karunanithi Mohanraj
Australian eHealth Research Centre, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Brisbane, Australia.
School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
JMIR Form Res. 2020 Dec 18;4(12):e17542. doi: 10.2196/17542.
Postdischarge interventions are limited for patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) due to few scheduled visits to outpatient clinics and the need to travel from remote areas. Smartphones have become viable lifestyle technology to deliver home-based educational and health interventions.
The aim of this study was to develop a smartphone-based intervention for providing postdischarge support to patients with ACS.
The content of Mobile Technology-Enabled Rehabilitation for Patients with ACS (MoTER-ACS) was derived from a series of small studies, termed prestudy surveys, conducted in 2017. The prestudy surveys were conducted in Prince Charles Hospital, Queensland, Australia, and consisted of questionnaires among a convenience sample of patients with ACS (n=30), a focus group discussion with health care professionals (n=10), and an online survey among cardiologists (n=15). Responses from the patient survey identified educational topics of MoTER-ACS. The focus group with health care professionals assisted with identifying educational materials, health monitoring, and self-management interventions. Based on the results of the cardiologists' survey, monitoring of symptoms related to heart failure exacerbation was considered as a weekly diary.
The MoTER-ACS app covers multimedia educational materials to adopt a healthy lifestyle and includes user-friendly tools to monitor physiological and health parameters such as blood pressure, weight, and pain, assisting patients in self-managing their condition. A web portal that is linked to the data from the smartphone app is available to clinicians to regularly access patients' data and provide support.
The MoTER-ACS platform extends the capabilities of previous mobile health platforms by providing a home-based educational and self-management intervention for patients with ACS following discharge from the hospital. The MoTER-ACS intervention narrows the gap between existing hospital-based programs and home-based interventions by complementing the postdischarge program for patients with ACS.
由于急性冠状动脉综合征(ACS)患者门诊预约就诊次数少且需要从偏远地区前来,出院后的干预措施有限。智能手机已成为可行的生活方式技术,可用于提供居家教育和健康干预。
本研究旨在开发一种基于智能手机的干预措施,为ACS患者提供出院后支持。
适用于ACS患者的移动技术辅助康复(MoTER-ACS)的内容源自2017年进行的一系列小型研究,即预研究调查。预研究调查在澳大利亚昆士兰州查尔斯王子医院进行,包括对ACS患者便利样本(n = 30)进行问卷调查、与医护人员进行焦点小组讨论(n = 10)以及对心脏病专家进行在线调查(n = 15)。患者调查的反馈确定了MoTER-ACS的教育主题。与医护人员的焦点小组讨论有助于确定教育材料、健康监测和自我管理干预措施。根据心脏病专家的调查结果,将与心力衰竭加重相关症状的监测视为每周日记。
MoTER-ACS应用程序涵盖了采用健康生活方式的多媒体教育材料,并包括便于用户使用的工具来监测血压血压、体重和疼痛等生理和健康参数,帮助患者自我管理病情。临床医生可通过一个与智能手机应用程序数据相连的门户网站定期访问患者数据并提供支持。
MoTER-ACS平台通过为出院后的ACS患者提供居家教育和自我管理干预措施,扩展了以往移动健康平台的功能。MoTER-ACS干预措施通过补充ACS患者的出院后计划,缩小了现有基于医院的项目与居家干预措施之间的差距。