| Literature DB >> 27383743 |
Christianne Micallef1, Monsey McLeod, Enrique Castro-Sánchez, Myriam Gharbi, Esmita Charani, Luke Sp Moore, Mark Gilchrist, Fran Husson, Ceire Costelloe, Alison H Holmes.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current advances in modern technology have enabled the development and utilization of electronic medical software apps for both mobile and desktop computing devices. A range of apps on a large variety of clinical conditions for patients and the public are available, but very few target antimicrobials or infections.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial resistance; mHealth; mobile electronic devices; mobile health; patient involvement
Year: 2016 PMID: 27383743 PMCID: PMC4954917 DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.5243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Demographics of the patient sample .
| Patient characteristics | n (%) | |
| 46 (48) | ||
| Degree | 46 (52) | |
| Other qualifications | 29 (33) | |
| No qualifications | 13 (15) | |
| Desktop/laptop | 62 (70) | |
| Android mobile phone | 36 (40) | |
| Android tablet | 15 (17) | |
| Apple mobile phone | 40 (45) | |
| Apple tablet | 27 (30) | |
| Windows-based mobile phone | 6 (7) | |
| Windows-based tablet | 3 (3) | |
| Blackberry mobile phone | 1 (1) | |
| Other device | 4 (4) | |
| No device | 8 (9) | |
Preferences for an antimicrobial app and patients' perceptions on the utilization of electronic platforms by health care professionals.
| Parameter | n (%) | |
| Treatment of symptoms | 64 (75) | |
| Side-effects of antimicrobials | 60 (71) | |
| Duration of common infections | 53 (62) | |
| Tips on how to reduce risk of getting common infections | 49 (58) | |
| Are antimicrobials indicated for my infection? | 48 (56) | |
| When do I need to see my doctor? | 47 (55) | |
| Signs of bacterial versus viral chest infections | 43 (51) | |
| Recording of antimicrobial treatment information | 30 (35) | |
| Other information (free text) | 5 (6) | |
| Fine to use | 52 (55) | |
| Not fine, they should not be using it | 12 (13) | |
| Depends on the situation | 22 (23) | |
| Other: specific scenario given | 9 (9) | |
Themes emerging from respondents’ feedbacka.
| Global theme | Main theme | Verbatim comment | Respondent characteristics |
| Knowledge | |||
| Patient information leaflets | |||
| Male, no age supplied | |||
| Female, 60 years old | |||
| Information on infections and/or antimicrobials | |||
| Female, 27 years old | |||
| Male, 29 years old | |||
| Male, 60 years old | |||
| “Gap one should leave between antibiotic courses in order to decrease resistance.” | Male, 66 years old | ||
| Female, 48 years old | |||
| Male, 39 years old | |||
| Technology | |||
| Technology awareness | |||
| Male, 33 years old | |||
| Female, 43 years old | |||
| Male, 40 years old | |||
| Patient experience | |||
| Personal experience with infections/antimicrobial prescribing | |||
| Female, 57 years old | |||
| Female, 24 years old | |||
| Female, 57 years old | |||
| Female, 32 years old |
aOnly superfluous comments were excluded (eg, “great” or “I have a carer”); the rest are all included in the table.