| Literature DB >> 27619804 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile technology has opened opportunities within health care and research to allow for frequent monitoring of patients. This has given rise to detailed longitudinal information and new insights concerning behaviour and development of conditions over time. Responding to frequent questionnaires delivered through mobile technology has also shown good compliance, far exceeding that of traditional paper questionnaires. However, to optimize compliance, the burden on the subjects should be kept at a minimum. In this study, the effect of using fewer data points compared to the full data set was examined, assuming that fewer measurements would lead to better compliance.Entities:
Keywords: Low back pain; Repeated measures; Short message service; Text messages
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27619804 PMCID: PMC5020455 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-016-0221-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
The baseline characteristics of the original full data set and those of the study sample
| Variable | Original study | This study |
|---|---|---|
| Age, median (IQR) | 43 (35–53) | 46 (36–54) |
| Gender, % female | 48 | 50 |
| Pain, VAS, 1–10, median (IQR) | 4.0 (3–6) | 4.0 (3–6) |
| Leg pain, % | 49.3 | 47.2 |
| Duration of LBP > 30 days % | 58.4 | 55.0 |
| Health-related quality of life: | ||
| EQ-5D mean (SD) | 0.715 (0.21) | 0.734 (0.20) |
| General Health median (IQR) | 2 (2–3) | 2 (2–3) |
Distribution of subjects in clusters formed by the reference data (A) and the incomplete data sets (B–F)
| Reference, A, the full data set, 26 weekly measures | Kappa Agreement (Weighted Kappa) | ||||
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| Cluster 1 “Fast improvers” | Cluster 2 “Normal improvers” | Cluster 3 “Slow improvers” | Cluster 4 “Indifferent” | ||
| B, first 8 weeks | |||||
| Cluster 1 |
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| 0.272 (0.548) |
| Cluster 2 |
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| C, first 13 weeks | |||||
| Cluster 1 |
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| 0.348 (0.611) |
| Cluster 2 |
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| D, first 8 weeks + monthly thereafter | |||||
| Cluster1 |
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| 0.618 (0.720) |
| Cluster 2 |
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| E, every other week | |||||
| Cluster 1 |
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| 0.642 |
| Cluster 2 |
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| (0.823) |
| Cluster 3 |
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| F, first 18 weeks | |||||
| Cluster 1 |
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| 0.611 (0.708) |
| Cluster 2 |
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Figures in bold show number of subjects in B–F that are classified in clusters with similar trajectories as A
Fig. 1The cluster trajectories of option A
Fig. 2The cluster trajectories of option B
Fig. 3The cluster trajectories of option C
Fig. 4The cluster trajectories of option D
Fig. 5The cluster trajectories of option E
Fig. 6The cluster trajectories of option F
Fig. 7Relative Risks for experiencing a day with bothersome pain estimated from weekly SMS-answers separating subjects with pain of long duration (>30 days the previous year) from those with short duration (≤30 days the previous year). RR was estimated separately for each week, 1–26, with short duration as the reference category. Dotted vertical lines are shown to help the interpretation of results for measurements up to 8 weeks, 13 weeks and 18 weeks. The trajectories for the two groups are also shown, with short duration as the solid line