Carlozzi Noelle E, Troost Jonathan P, Sen Srijan, Choi Sung Won, Wu Zhenke, Miner Jennifer A, Lombard Wendy L, Graves Christopher, Sander Angelle M
Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2025 Apr;106(4):548-561. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2024.12.022. Epub 2025 Jan 9.
To test the efficacy of a randomized control trial low-touch mobile health intervention designed to promote care partner self-awareness and self-care.
This randomized controlled trial included a baseline assessment of self-report surveys of health-related quality of life (HRQOL), care partner-specific outcomes, and the functional/mental status of the person with traumatic brain injury (TBI), as well as a 6-month home monitoring period that included 3 daily questions about HRQOL, monthly assessments of 12 HRQOL domains, and the use of a Fitbit to continuously monitor physical activity and sleep. HRQOL surveys were repeated at 3 and 6 months post-home monitoring.
Two academic medical centers.
A total of 254 TBI care partners.
The CareQOL app, a mobile health app designed to promote care partner self-awareness (through self-monitoring) and self-care (through personalized self-care push notifications).
Care partners were randomly assigned to self-monitoring alone (n=128) or self-monitoring plus self-care push notifications (n=126). Although we neither saw improvements in HRQOL outcomes, nor in physical activity or sleep, we found that across all the different measures, approximately 1/3 of the participants showed clinically meaningful improvements, 1/3 stayed the same, and 1/3 got worse; care partners who reported engagement in the intervention were more likely to show improvements than those who were not engaged. There was preliminary support for factors that being male, caring for a person with posttraumatic stress symptoms, living in the same household as the person with TBI, being a spousal care partner, working, and being diagnosed with COVID-19 during the study were associated with increased risk for negative outcomes.
Findings suggest that engagement with the app, even when it is confined to self-monitoring alone, is associated with small improvements in HRQOL.
测试一项旨在促进照护伙伴自我认知和自我照护的随机对照试验低接触式移动健康干预措施的效果。
这项随机对照试验包括对健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)的自我报告调查、照护伙伴特定结果以及创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者的功能/心理状态进行基线评估,以及为期6个月的家庭监测期,其中包括每天3个关于HRQOL的问题、对12个HRQOL领域的月度评估,以及使用Fitbit持续监测身体活动和睡眠。在家庭监测后的3个月和6个月重复进行HRQOL调查。
两个学术医疗中心。
共有254名TBI照护伙伴。
CareQOL应用程序,一款旨在通过自我监测促进照护伙伴自我认知和通过个性化自我照护推送通知促进自我照护的移动健康应用程序。
照护伙伴被随机分配到仅自我监测组(n = 128)或自我监测加自我照护推送通知组(n = 126)。尽管我们既未看到HRQOL结果、身体活动或睡眠方面有所改善,但我们发现,在所有不同的测量中,约1/ 3的参与者显示出具有临床意义的改善,1/3保持不变,1/3变差;报告参与干预的照护伙伴比未参与的更有可能显示出改善。初步支持以下因素,即男性、照顾有创伤后应激症状的人、与TBI患者同住一个家庭、作为配偶照护伙伴、工作以及在研究期间被诊断出感染COVID-19与负面结果风险增加相关。
研究结果表明,即使仅局限于自我监测,使用该应用程序也与HRQOL的小幅改善相关。