| Literature DB >> 27256035 |
Carolyn Steele Gray1, Ashlinder Gill, Anum Irfan Khan, Parminder Kaur Hans, Kerry Kuluski, Cheryl Cott.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People experiencing complex chronic disease and disability (CCDD) face some of the greatest challenges of any patient population. Primary care providers find it difficult to manage multiple discordant conditions and symptoms and often complex social challenges experienced by these patients. The electronic Patient Reported Outcome (ePRO) tool is designed to overcome some of these challenges by supporting goal-oriented primary care delivery. Using the tool, patients and providers collaboratively develop health care goals on a portal linked to a mobile device to help patients and providers track progress between visits.Entities:
Keywords: eHealth; feasibility; mHealth; multimorbidity; pilot; primary care; usability
Year: 2016 PMID: 27256035 PMCID: PMC4911509 DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.5331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Feasibility and usability measures.
| Conceptual framework | Measure | Data source | |
| Feasibility | |||
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| Demographics | Patient information form |
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| Comfort with technology | Patient and provider self-report (in training or in focus groups or interviews) | |
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| Use of technology | Data of ePRO system | |
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| Fit into daily routines | Patient focus groups and interviews | |
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| Fit into provider workflows | Provider focus groups | |
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| Usability assessment (in the following category) |
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| Usability | |||
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| Time to complete monitoring (ie, time on task) | System data |
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| Reported efficiency | Patient focus groups and interviews | |
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| Reported errors | Online | |
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| Reported learnability | Patient focus groups and interviews | |
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| Reported satisfaction | Patient focus groups and interviews | |
Figure 1A diagram of the FITT Framework to assess usability and feasibility. Adapted from Sheehan et al [27] p. 364.
Figure 2Depiction of the ePRO portal.
Figure 3Depiction of the ePRO mobile app.
Patient demographics, goal monitoring activities, and system usage.
| Patient participants | N=11 | |
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| Average age | 58 years |
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| Min | 35 years |
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| Max | 72 years |
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| Male | n=5 |
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| Female | n=6 |
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| Other (ie, transgender) | n=0 |
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Country of origin
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| Canada | n=5 |
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| United Kingdom | n=2 |
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| United States | n=1 |
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| Jamaica | n=1 |
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| Not reported | n=2 |
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Reported comfort with technology
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| Previous experience | n=6 |
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| Little experience | n=2 |
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| Not reported | n=3 |
| Attrition | n=3 | |
| Goals tracked |
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| Physical health | n=6 |
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| Mood and memory | n=3 |
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| Pain | n=2 |
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| Diet | n=2 |
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| Mobility | n=1 |
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| Patients tracking 1 goal | n=4 |
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| Patients tracking 2 goals | n=4 |
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| Patients tracking 3goals | n=1 |
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| Patients tracking 4 goals | n=1 |
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| One dropout patient did not set a goal | |
| System usage |
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| Unique survey completions | 210 |
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| Questions responded | 1311 |
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| Portal access | 1.74 average |
Time to complete monitoring tasks for patients.
| Goals | No. of questions per survey/protocol | No. of protocol completions | Time to complete protocol (minutes) |
| Physical health | 6 required, 3 optional | 75 | Average: 3 |
| Mood and memory | 5 required, 3 optional | 68 | Average: 5.3 |
| Pain | 5 required, 3 optional | 52 | Average: 5.6 |
| Mobility | 23 required, 2 optional | 3 | Average: 6.3 |
| Diet | 2 required, 1 optional | 9 | Average: 1.7 |
aIf patients left surveys in the middle of completing them, the system recorded the full amount of time it took to complete the survey resulting in outliers as high as 1428 minutes.
Feasibility and usability assessment overview.
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| Users | Task | Technology |
| Patients | Multiple chronic conditions with moderate comfort with technology. | Daily routines: Have multiple health and personal concerns to manage Some already using other self-management support tools and apps | The ePRO tool met user needs to monitor and track goals they wished to work on; however, it did not fit well with daily tasks given questions were repetitive and not appropriately tailored to goal activities, and the tool was unable to connect with other monitoring activities in which patients were already engaged. |
| Providers | Multi-disciplinary providers from primary health care practice, moderate to high level of comfort with technology. | Workflows: Only able to review data before visit to get a snapshot view of the patient, limited time to monitor patients in-between visits Use SMART goals Need to chart in EMR systems | The ePRO tool was helpful in getting patients to discuss goals as a strategy to improve management; however, it did not fit well with provider workflows in terms of supporting SMART goal development and integration with the EMR. |