Tahsin Farah, Tracy Shawn, Chau Edward, Harvey Sarah, Loganathan Mayura, McKinstry Brian, Mercer Stewart W, Nie Jason, Ramsay Tim, Thavorn Kednapa, Palen Ted, Sritharan Jasvinei, Steele Gray Carolyn
Institute of Health Policy, Management, and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Canada.
Bridgepoint Collaboratory for Research and Innovation, Canada.
Digit Health. 2021 Oct 5;7:20552076211045579. doi: 10.1177/20552076211045579. eCollection 2021 Jan-Dec.
Mobile health applications are increasingly used to support the delivery of health care services to a variety of patients. Based on data obtained from a pragmatic trial of the electronic Patient Reported Outcome (ePRO) app designed to support goal-oriented care primary care, this study aims to (1) examine how patient-reported usability changed over the one-year intervention period, and (2) explore participant attrition rate of the electronic Patient Reported Outcome app over one year study period.
We performed a secondary analysis of 44 older adults with complex chronic needs enrolled in the electronic Patient Reported Outcome-digital health intervention. App usage and attrition were measured using device-generated usage logs; usability was measured using the patient-reported post-study system usability questionnaire collected at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months. Research memos were used to interpret potential contextual contributing factors to patients' overall usage and usability score pattern. A data triangulation method of both quantitative and qualitative data was used to analyze and interpret study findings.
While there was gradual attrition in the use of the ePRO app, patients' usability scores remained consistent throughout the study period. Qualitative memos suggested patients' encounters with technical difficulties and relationship dynamics with primary providers influenced patients' adherence to the ePRO app.
This study highlights that the patient-provider relationship is a key determining factor that influences complex patients' continued engagement with a Mobile health app. The finding calls attention to the measurement of usability of a Mobile health app, its impact on attrition, and contributing factors that influence patients' attrition. Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov Identified NCT02917954.
移动健康应用程序越来越多地用于支持向各类患者提供医疗保健服务。基于一项旨在支持以目标为导向的初级保健的电子患者报告结局(ePRO)应用程序的实用试验所获得的数据,本研究旨在:(1)检查患者报告的可用性在一年的干预期内如何变化;(2)探讨在一年的研究期内电子患者报告结局应用程序的参与者流失率。
我们对44名有复杂慢性需求的老年人进行了二次分析,这些老年人参与了电子患者报告结局-数字健康干预。应用程序的使用情况和流失情况通过设备生成的使用日志进行测量;可用性通过在3、6、9和12个月时收集的患者报告的研究后系统可用性问卷进行测量。研究备忘录用于解释影响患者总体使用情况和可用性得分模式的潜在背景因素。采用定量和定性数据的数据三角测量方法来分析和解释研究结果。
虽然ePRO应用程序的使用存在逐渐流失的情况,但患者的可用性得分在整个研究期间保持一致。定性备忘录表明,患者遇到的技术困难以及与初级医疗服务提供者的关系动态影响了患者对ePRO应用程序的依从性。
本研究强调,患者与医疗服务提供者的关系是影响复杂患者持续使用移动健康应用程序的关键决定因素。这一发现提醒人们关注移动健康应用程序可用性的测量、其对流失率的影响以及影响患者流失的因素。试验注册:Clinicaltrials.gov标识符NCT02917954。