Department of Gerontology, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Swiss Paraplegic Research, Nottwil, Switzerland.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2024 Aug 5;12:e49576. doi: 10.2196/49576.
Technology has become an integral part of our everyday life, and its use to manage and study health is no exception. Romantic partners play a critical role in managing chronic health conditions as they tend to be a primary source of support.
This study tests the feasibility of using commercial wearables to monitor couples' unique way of communicating and supporting each other and documents the physiological correlates of interpersonal dynamics (ie, heart rate linkage).
We analyzed 617 audio recordings of 5-minute duration (384 with concurrent heart rate data) and 527 brief self-reports collected from 11 couples in which 1 partner had type II diabetes during the course of their typical daily lives. Audio data were coded by trained raters for social support. The extent to which heart rate fluctuations were linked among couples was quantified using cross-correlations. Random-intercept multilevel models explored whether cross-correlations might differ by social contexts and exchanges.
Sixty percent of audio recordings captured speech between partners and partners reported personal contact with each other in 75% of self-reports. Based on the coding, social support was found in 6% of recordings, whereas at least 1 partner self-reported social support about half the time (53%). Couples, on average, showed small to moderate interconnections in their heart rate fluctuations (r=0.04-0.22). Couples also varied in the extent to which there was lagged linkage, that is, meaning that changes in one partner's heart rate tended to precede changes in the other partner's heart rate. Exploratory analyses showed that heart rate linkage was stronger (1) in rater-coded partner conversations (vs moments of no rater-coded partner conversations: r=0.13; P=.03), (2) when partners self-reported interpersonal contact (vs moments of no self-reported interpersonal contact: r=0.20; P<.001), and (3) when partners self-reported social support exchanges (vs moments of no self-reported social support exchange: r=0.15; P=.004).
Our study provides initial evidence for the utility of using wearables to collect biopsychosocial data in couples managing a chronic health condition in daily life. Specifically, heart rate linkage might play a role in fostering chronic disease management as a couple. Insights from collecting such data could inform future technology interventions to promote healthy lifestyle engagement and adaptive chronic disease management.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR2-10.2196/13685.
技术已成为我们日常生活不可或缺的一部分,其在健康管理和研究中的应用也不例外。在管理慢性健康状况方面,伴侣起着至关重要的作用,因为他们往往是主要的支持来源。
本研究旨在测试使用商业可穿戴设备监测伴侣间独特沟通方式和相互支持方式的可行性,并记录人际动态的生理相关性(即心率关联)。
我们分析了 11 对伴侣在日常生活中 617 段时长 5 分钟(384 段有同步心率数据)的音频记录和 527 段简短的自我报告,其中 1 名伴侣患有 2 型糖尿病。经过训练的评估人员对音频数据进行了社会支持编码。使用互相关来量化伴侣间心率波动的关联程度。随机截距多水平模型探讨了互相关是否可能因社会背景和交流而异。
60%的音频记录捕捉到了伴侣间的对话,而在自我报告中,75%的报告显示双方有个人接触。根据编码结果,6%的记录中存在社会支持,而至少有 1 名伴侣在一半的时间里报告了社会支持(53%)。平均而言,伴侣间的心率波动存在小到中等程度的相互关联(r=0.04-0.22)。伴侣间的滞后关联程度也存在差异,即一方的心率变化往往先于另一方的心率变化。探索性分析表明,当评估人员编码的伴侣对话(与没有评估人员编码的伴侣对话相比:r=0.13;P=.03)、伴侣自我报告人际接触(与没有自我报告人际接触相比:r=0.20;P<.001)和伴侣自我报告社会支持交换(与没有自我报告社会支持交换相比:r=0.15;P=.004)时,心率关联更强。
本研究初步证明了在日常生活中使用可穿戴设备收集患有慢性健康状况的伴侣的生物心理社会数据的有效性。具体来说,心率关联可能在促进慢性病管理方面发挥作用。收集此类数据的见解可以为未来促进健康生活方式参与和适应性慢性病管理的技术干预措施提供信息。
国际注册报告标识符(IRRID):RR2-10.2196/13685。