| Literature DB >> 26719678 |
Teresa J Kelechi1, Mohan Madisetti1, Martina Mueller1, Mary Dooley1, Margaret Prentice1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For intervention studies that require the use of participant self-reports, the quality and accuracy of recorded data and variability in participant adherence rates to the treatment can cause significant outcome bias.Entities:
Keywords: chronic illness; diary logs; lower leg; prevention intervention; self care; symptoms
Year: 2015 PMID: 26719678 PMCID: PMC4689265 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S91992
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Figure 1Monthly study log.
Demographics
| Demographics | Intervention group n=54 | Control group n=46 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years, mean (SD) | 64.6 (11.0) | 61.7 (10.8) | 0.19 |
| Sex | 0.42 | ||
| Male | 23 (42.6) | 16 (34.8) | |
| Female | 31 (57.4) | 30 (65.2) | |
| Race | 0.85 | ||
| White | 15 (27.8) | 12 (26.1) | |
| Black/African American | 39 (72.2) | 34 (73.9) | |
| Employment | 0.73 | ||
| Employed (full or part time) | 11 (20.4) | 10 (21.7) | |
| Not employed | 12 (22.2) | 13 (28.3) | |
| Retired | 31 (57.4) | 23 (50.0) | |
| Education | 0.51 | ||
| High school or less or missing | 21 (38.9) | 16 (34.8) | |
| High school graduate | 25 (46.3) | 19 (41.3) | |
| Some college or college graduate | 8 (14.8) | 11 (23.9) | |
| Marriage status | 0.12 | ||
| Not married | 28 (51.9) | 31 (67.4) | |
| Married | 26 (48.2) | 15 (32.6) | |
| Residence | 0.84 | ||
| Rural | 21 (38.9) | 17 (37.0) | |
| Urban | 33 (61.1) | 29 (63.0) |
Notes:
N (%) unless otherwise noted; there are no significant differences between groups, P>0.05. Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
Abbreviation: SD, standard deviation.
Figure 2CONSORT flow diagram.
Abbreviation: CONSORT, consolidated standards of reporting trials.
Returned participant study logs error typology
| Error type | Returned logs
| |
|---|---|---|
| N=826
| ||
| n | % | |
| White-outs, cross-offs and/or overwrites | 489 | 59.2 |
| Entries omitted (temperatures and/or before or after treatment times) | 288 | 34.9 |
| Morning leg skin temperature monitoring not performed | 243 | 29.4 |
| Cooling intervention not performed per protocol | 237 | 28.7 |
| Extraneous data recorded | 221 | 26.8 |
| Recorded cooling intervention time not per protocol (<30 or >40 minutes) | 208 | 25.2 |
| Wrong monthly/weekly sheet used | 92 | 11.1 |
| Suspected fabrication of data (patterns of columned handwriting, etc) | 71 | 8.6 |
| Not all monthly/weekly sheets returned | 71 | 8.6 |
| Illegible hand writing | 68 | 8.2 |
| Questionable validity of data (severely extreme values, etc) | 63 | 7.6 |
| Use of dittos or arrows | 55 | 6.7 |
| Data recorded in wrong box | 38 | 4.6 |
| Freezer temperature not maintained per protocol at 0°C (±2°C) | 38 | 4.6 |
| Monthly log returned but completely unusable | 36 | 4.4 |
| Weekly sheets returned in wrong order | 29 | 3.5 |
| Multiple data entry in the same box | 17 | 2.1 |
| Monthly logs returned blank | 16 | 1.9 |
Note:
Error types are not mutually exclusive, therefore percentages do not sum to 100%.
Average accuracy of participant monthly study logs by demographics
| Intervention group
| Control group
| All groups
| ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | <85% | 85%–99% | 100% | N | <85% | 85%–99% | 100% | N | <85% | 85%–99% | 100% | |
| Total sample | 54 | 10 (18.5%) | 30 (55.6%) | 14 (25.9%) | 46 | 12 (26.1%) | 23 (50.0%) | 11 (23.9%) | 100 | 22 (22.0%) | 53 (53.0%) | 25 (25.0%) |
| Age, years, mean (SD) | 54 | 70.0 (9.3) | 65.0 (12.0) | 59.8 (8.3) | 46 | 61.8 (12.8) | 60.7 (10.4) | 63.7 (10.1) | 100 | 65.5 (11.9) | 63.2 (11.4) | 61.5 (9.1) |
| Sex | ||||||||||||
| Male | 23 | 3 (13.0%) | 16 (69.6%) | 4 (17.4%) | 16 | 5 (31.3%) | 6 (37.5%) | 5 (31.3%) | 39 | 8 (20.5%) | 22 (56.4%) | 9 (23.1%) |
| Female | 31 | 7 (22.6%) | 14 (45.2%) | 10 (32.3%) | 30 | 7 (23.3%) | 17 (56.7%) | 6 (20.0%) | 61 | 14 (23.0%) | 31 (50.8%) | 16 (26.2%) |
| Race | ||||||||||||
| Black/African American | 39 | 8 (20.5%) | 22 (56.4%) | 9 (23.1%) | 34 | 9 (26.5%) | 18 (52.9%) | 7 (20.6%) | 73 | 17 (23.3%) | 40 (54.8%) | 16 (21.9%) |
| White | 15 | 2 (13.3%) | 8 (53.3%) | 5 (33.3%) | 12 | 3 (25.0%) | 5 (41.7%) | 4 (33.3%) | 27 | 5 (18.3%) | 13 (48.1%) | 9 (33.3%) |
| Marital status | ||||||||||||
| Not married | 28 | 5 (17.9%) | 17 (60.7%) | 6 (21.4%) | 31 | 10 (32.3%) | 16 (51.6%) | 5 (16.1%) | 59 | 15 (25.4%) | 33 (55.9%) | 11 (18.6%) |
| Live with partner | 26 | 5 (19.2%) | 13 (50.0%) | 8 (30.8%) | 15 | 2 (13.3%) | 7 (46.7%) | 6 (40.0%) | 41 | 7 (17.1%) | 20 (48.8%) | 14 (34.1%) |
| Education | ||||||||||||
| Less than high school | 13 | 5 (38.5%) | 7 (53.9%) | 1 (7.7%) | 9 | 2 (22.2%) | 5 (55.6%) | 2 (22.2%) | 22 | 7 (31.8%) | 12 (54.5%) | 3 (13.6%) |
| High school graduate | 25 | 4 (16.0%) | 15 (60.0%) | 6 (24.0%) | 19 | 5 (26.3%) | 9 (47.4%) | 5 (26.3%) | 44 | 9 (20.5%) | 24 (54.5%) | 11 (25.0%) |
| More than high school | 16 | 1 (6.3%) | 8 (50.0%) | 7 (43.8%) | 18 | 5 (27.8%) | 9 (50.0%) | 4 (22.2%) | 34 | 6 (17.6%) | 17 (50.0%) | 11 (32.4%) |
| Employment | ||||||||||||
| Not employed | 43 | 9 (20.9%) | 23 (53.5%) | 11 (25.6%) | 36 | 11 (30.6%) | 16 (44.4%) | 9 (25.0%) | 79 | 20 (25.3%) | 39 (49.4%) | 20 (25.3%) |
| Employed | 11 | 1 (9.1%) | 7 (63.6%) | 3 (27.3%) | 10 | 1 (10.0%) | 7 (70.0%) | 2 (20.0%) | 21 | 2 (9.5%) | 14 (66.7%) | 5 (23.8%) |
| Type of job held | ||||||||||||
| Professional | 21 | 2 (9.5%) | 11 (52.4%) | 8 (38.1%) | 21 | 5 (23.8%) | 12 (57.1%) | 4 (19.0%) | 42 | 7 (16.7%) | 23 (54.8%) | 12 (28.6%) |
| Technical | 13 | 3 (23.1%) | 9 (69.2%) | 1 (7.7%) | 14 | 4 (28.6%) | 6 (42.9%) | 4 (28.6%) | 27 | 7 (25.9%) | 15 (55.6%) | 5 (18.5%) |
| Manual | 16 | 3 (18.8%) | 8 (50.0%) | 5 (31.3%) | 8 | 2 (25.0%) | 4 (50.0%) | 2 (25.0%) | 24 | 5 (20.8%) | 12 (50.0%) | 7 (29.2%) |
| Other | 4 | 2 (50.0%) | 2 (50.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 | 1 (33.3%) | 1 (33.3%) | 1 (33.3%) | 7 | 3 (42.9%) | 3 (42.9%) | 1 (14.3%) |
| Residence | ||||||||||||
| Rural | 21 | 1 (4.8%) | 12 (57.1%) | 8 (38.1%) | 17 | 4 (23.5%) | 10 (58.8%) | 3 (17.6%) | 38 | 5 (13.2%) | 22 (57.9%) | 11 (28.9%) |
| Urban | 33 | 9 (27.3%) | 18 (54.6%) | 6 (18.2%) | 29 | 8 (27.6%) | 13 (44.8%) | 8 (27.6%) | 62 | 17 (27.4%) | 31 (50.0%) | 14 (22.6%) |
| Volunteered before | ||||||||||||
| Yes | 5 | 3 (60.0%) | 1 (20.0%) | 1 (20.0%) | 5 | 1 (20.0%) | 2 (40.0%) | 2 (40.0%) | 10 | 4 (40.0%) | 3 (10.0%) | 3 (30.0%) |
| No | 49 | 7 (14.3%) | 29 (59.2%) | 13 (26.5%) | 41 | 11 (26.8%) | 21 (51.2%) | 9 (22.0%) | 90 | 18 (20.0%) | 50 (55.6%) | 22 (24.4%) |
Notes:
Current or previous job held.
Volunteered for research study before. There are no significant differences between groups, P>0.05.
Abbreviation: SD, standard deviation.
Average accuracy of participant monthly study logs by end-of-study satisfaction survey
| Difficulty of procedures | Intervention group
| Control group
| ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | <85% | 85%–99% | 100% | N | <85% | 85%–99% | 100% | |
| Total sample | 54 | 10 (18.5%) | 30 (55.6%) | 14 (25.9%) | 46 | 12 (26.1%) | 23 (50.0%) | 11 (23.9%) |
| DVD instruction score | ||||||||
| <10 | 0 | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| 10–15 | 7 | 0 (0.0%) | 6 (85.7%) | 1 (14.3%) | 9 | 3 (33.2%) | 3 (33.2%) | 3 (33.2%) |
| 16 (perfect score) | 45 | 10 (22.2%) | 23 (51.1%) | 12 (26.7%) | 35 | 8 (22.9%) | 19 (54.3%) | 8 (22.9%) |
| Treatment | ||||||||
| Easy/somewhat easy | 48 | 10 (20.8%) | 26 (54.2%) | 12 (25.0%) | 45 | 11 (24.4%) | 23 (51.1%) | 11 (24.4%) |
| Difficult/somewhat difficult | 5 | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (60.0%) | 2 (40.0%) | 1 | 1 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Leg-cuff use | ||||||||
| Easy/somewhat easy | 46 | 8 (17.4%) | 25 (54.4%) | 13 (28.3%) | 43 | 10 (23.3%) | 22 (51.2%) | 10 (34.5%) |
| Difficult/somewhat difficult | 7 | 2 (28.6%) | 4 (57.1%) | 1 (14.3%) | 3 | 2 (66.7%) | 1 (33.3%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Comfortable to elevate | ||||||||
| Yes | 34 | 7 (19.4%) | 15 (41.7%) | 12 (33.3%) | 27 | 7 (24.1%) | 10 (34.5%) | 11 (25.6%) |
| No | 2 | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (5.6%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (6.9%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Thermometer use | ||||||||
| Easy/somewhat easy | 52 | 10 (19.2%) | 28 (53.9%) | 14 (26.9%) | 46 | 12 (26.1%) | 23 (50.0%) | 11 (23.9%) |
| Difficult/somewhat difficult | 0 | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Study log use | ||||||||
| Easy/somewhat easy | 48 | 9 (18.8%) | 25 (52.1%) | 14 (29.2%) | 44 | 11 (25.0%) | 22 (50.0%) | 11 (25.0%) |
| Difficult/somewhat difficult | 4 | 1 (25.0%) | 3 (75.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 | 1 (50.0%) | 1 (50.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
Note: There are no significant differences between groups, P>0.05.
Figure 3Mean monthly leg skin temperature difference before and after cooling treatment within the control group (placebo cuff) under ITT and mITT analysis.
Note: No statistical difference found between mITT and ITT analyses (P-value 1.0).
Abbreviations: ITT, intention-to-treat; mITT, modified intention-to-treat.
Figure 4Mean monthly leg skin temperature difference before and after cooling treatment within the intervention group (cooling gel-cuff) under ITT and mITT analysis.
Note: No statistical difference found between mITT and ITT analyses (P-value 1.0).
Abbreviations: ITT, intention-to-treat; mITT, modified intention-to-treat.