| Literature DB >> 21702957 |
David E Goodrich1, Lorraine R Buis, Adrienne W Janney, Megan D Ditty, Christine W Krause, Kai Zheng, Ananda Sen, Victor J Strecher, Michael L Hess, John D Piette, Caroline R Richardson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Regular participation in physical activity can prevent many chronic health conditions. Computerized self-management programs are effective clinical tools to support patient participation in physical activity. This pilot study sought to develop and evaluate an online interface for primary care providers to refer patients to an Internet-mediated walking program called Stepping Up to Health (SUH) and to monitor participant progress in the program.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21702957 PMCID: PMC3135495 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-11-47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Figure 1Intervention and Recruitment Flow.
Qualitative data themes elicited from provider interviews about the interface
| Qualitative Theme | Exemplary Quote |
|---|---|
| Phase I | |
| • "I like the site." | |
| • "A hand out of some sort is helpful. Just like a single page, here's what it's about, here's the website." | |
| • "...it would be helpful to have something that my medical assistant or somebody in the office could print out on the day that the patient was coming in and say this is what their steps have been doing and so I didn't have to log in necessarily or have them upload any pedometer information at the visit just to make it as quick as possible to go through." | |
| • "It seemed like the only time that it worked was if it was a face-to-face initiation from we [ | |
| • "It would be nice if I'd had [MA] ... kind of do it for me. But if there was any way that I could link up with the patient record I'm looking at because essentially if it pulls the data from [EMR] than this is all filled out for me basically and I just pick the yes, no - this is an acceptable patient for a walking trial and click send, and it is done." | |
| • "...just remember that it exists. I did not remember. I had the [study] fliers. I had like the thing put in front of my face on the bulletin board but we're so focused on the computer. I guess if I had opened the website every day then it would trigger me to remember it but I didn't remember it most of the time." | |
| • "It's a great tool. It's not necessarily a time saver. It just gives me a lot more information than I otherwise would get. Real information, not the patient's perception of their own exercise when I see them once a year or four times a year for their follow up. It's real hard data which is very helpful..." | |
| • "So in that short 6-7 weeks span, the chance of seeing one of these patients in the office while they're doing it is pretty limited and that's really when I'm most prompted to pull up their data and look at it." | |
Baseline socio-economic and health characteristics for patient participants
| N | 37 |
|---|---|
| Age (SD) | 45.2 (9.9) |
| Race, %a | |
| American Indian | 5.4 |
| Black | 5.4 |
| White | 91.9 |
| Female, % | 65.0 |
| Education,% | |
| High School degree, GED, or less | 8.2 |
| Some College or 2-year degree | 45.9 |
| College or graduate degree | 45.9 |
| Income, % | |
| < $30,000 | 13.5 |
| $30,000 - $49,999 | 24.3 |
| $50,000 - $69,999 | 16.2 |
| > $70,000 | 46.0 |
| Marital status, % | |
| Married | 31 |
| Divorced | 2 |
| Single | 4 |
| Other | 2 |
| Internet Experience, % | |
| Basic | 16.2 |
| Moderate | 37.8 |
| Advanced | 35.2 |
| Expert | 10.8 |
| Previous Pedometer Use,% | |
| Yes | 37.8 |
| No | 62.2 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 40.7 (7.6) |
| Currently Smoking, % | 3 (8.1%) |
| Diagnosis,% | |
| Obeseb | 97.3% |
| Type 2 Diabetes | 21.6% |
| Coronary Artery Disease | 8.1% |
a Some participants self-identified as more than one race
b 100% of sample was overweight (BMI > 25) with n = 1 reporting BMI < 30
Indicators of program effectiveness
| Changes in Patient Step Counts (N = 37) | Baseline Week | Final Week | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average total daily steps | 4520 ± 309 | 6013 ± 443 | |
| Average daily aerobic steps | 406 ± 137 | 1114 ± 218 | |
| Minutes of aerobic walking/week a | 27.0 ± 8.8 | 71.7 ± 14.7 | |
| SUH is useful | 4.6 (0.7) | 94.1% | |
| SUH increases the amount I walk | 4.6 (0.9) | 85.3% | |
| SUH is easy to use | 4.7 (0.6) | 94.1% | |
| I like working with SUH | 4.6 (0.7) | 88.2% | |
a Aerobic minutes of ambulatory activity are recorded by the Omron HJ-720-ITC pedometer. According to the criteria, data are recorded when an individual continuously engages in continuous movement such as walking, jogging, or running at a rate of 60+ steps per minute, involves no more than a 60-second pause, and lasts at least 10 minutes in duration.
b Satisfaction scores are based on a 5-item Likert scale where 5 = strongly agree and 1 = strongly disagree.