| Literature DB >> 28164174 |
Chihwen Cheng1, Clark Brown2, Tamara New2, Todd H Stokes3, Carlton Dampier2, May D Wang3.
Abstract
Sickle cell disease, the most common hemoglobinopathy in the world, affects patient lives from early childhood. Effective care of sickle cell disease requires frequent medical monitoring, such as tracking the frequency, severity, and duration of painful events. Conventional monitoring includes paper- or web-based reporting diaries. These systems require that patients carry forms, which are easily lost, or laptop computers, which are impractical to scale to large populations. Both are prone to sporadic use by older adolescents due to lack of reminders. In this paper, we design and prototype a Sickle cell disease REporting and MOnitoring TElemedicine system (SickleREMOTE), aiming to resolve limitations of conventional monitoring diaries. This monitoring system is configured as automated short message service text (SMS-text) messages that arrive at a mobile phone anywhere on a cellular network. The messages may be reminders to encourage treatment adherence or questionnaires to collect self-assessed clinical data relating to treatment adjustments. Patients respond to the messages using pre-determined templates and a cloud database parses and stores messages automatically. Providers use a web-based interface to view, analyze, and download collected data. SickleREMOTE is developed by Georgia Institute of Technology in conjunction with Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA). System effectiveness will be evaluated using a trial of 30 adolescents with sickle cell disease and measured by response rate, time to response, error rate, and correspondence with data collected by telephone calls.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 28164174 PMCID: PMC5287703 DOI: 10.1109/BHI.2012.6211602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE EMBS Int Conf Biomed Health Inform ISSN: 2641-3590