Literature DB >> 28347441

Assessment of a personalized and distributed patient guidance system.

Mor Peleg1, Yuval Shahar2, Silvana Quaglini3, Tom Broens4, Roxana Budasu5, Nick Fung6, Adi Fux7, Gema García-Sáez8, Ayelet Goldstein2, Arturo González-Ferrer7, Hermie Hermens6, M Elena Hernando8, Val Jones6, Guy Klebanov7, Denis Klimov2, Daniel Knoppel4, Nekane Larburu6, Carlos Marcos9, Iñaki Martínez-Sarriegui8, Carlo Napolitano5, Àngels Pallàs10, Angel Palomares9, Enea Parimbelli3, Belén Pons11, Mercedes Rigla11, Lucia Sacchi3, Erez Shalom2, Pnina Soffer7, Boris van Schooten6.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The MobiGuide project aimed to establish a ubiquitous, user-friendly, patient-centered mobile decision-support system for patients and for their care providers, based on the continuous application of clinical guidelines and on semantically integrated electronic health records. Patients would be empowered by the system, which would enable them to lead their normal daily lives in their regular environment, while feeling safe, because their health state would be continuously monitored using mobile sensors and self-reporting of symptoms. When conditions occur that require medical attention, patients would be notified as to what they need to do, based on evidence-based guidelines, while their medical team would be informed appropriately, in parallel. We wanted to assess the system's feasibility and potential effects on patients and care providers in two different clinical domains.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We describe MobiGuide's architecture, which embodies these objectives. Our novel methodologies include a ubiquitous architecture, encompassing a knowledge elicitation process for parallel coordinated workflows for patients and care providers; the customization of computer-interpretable guidelines (CIGs) by secondary contexts affecting remote management and distributed decision-making; a mechanism for episodic, on demand projection of the relevant portions of CIGs from a centralized, backend decision-support system (DSS), to a local, mobile DSS, which continuously delivers the actual recommendations to the patient; shared decision-making that embodies patient preferences; semantic data integration; and patient and care provider notification services. MobiGuide has been implemented and assessed in a preliminary fashion in two domains: atrial fibrillation (AF), and gestational diabetes Mellitus (GDM). Ten AF patients used the AF MobiGuide system in Italy and 19 GDM patients used the GDM MobiGuide system in Spain. The evaluation of the MobiGuide system focused on patient and care providers' compliance to CIG recommendations and their satisfaction and quality of life.
RESULTS: Our evaluation has demonstrated the system's capability for supporting distributed decision-making and its use by patients and clinicians. The results show that compliance of GDM patients to the most important monitoring targets - blood glucose levels (performance of four measurements a day: 0.87±0.11; measurement according to the recommended frequency of every day or twice a week: 0.99±0.03), ketonuria (0.98±0.03), and blood pressure (0.82±0.24) - was high in most GDM patients, while compliance of AF patients to the most important targets was quite high, considering the required ECG measurements (0.65±0.28) and blood-pressure measurements (0.75±1.33). This outcome was viewed by the clinicians as a major potential benefit of the system, and the patients have demonstrated that they are capable of self-monitoring - something that they had not experienced before. In addition, the system caused the clinicians managing the AF patients to change their diagnosis and subsequent treatment for two of the ten AF patients, and caused the clinicians managing the GDM patients to start insulin therapy earlier in two of the 19 patients, based on system's recommendations. Based on the end-of-study questionnaires, the sense of safety that the system has provided to the patients was its greatest asset. Analysis of the patients' quality of life (QoL) questionnaires for the AF patients was inconclusive, because while most patients reported an improvement in their quality of life in the EuroQoL questionnaire, most AF patients reported a deterioration in the AFEQT questionnaire. DISCUSSION: Feasibility and some of the potential benefits of an evidence-based distributed patient-guidance system were demonstrated in both clinical domains. The potential application of MobiGuide to other medical domains is supported by its standards-based patient health record with multiple electronic medical record linking capabilities, generic data insertion methods, generic medical knowledge representation and application methods, and the ability to communicate with a wide range of sensors. Future larger scale evaluations can assess the impact of such a system on clinical outcomes.
CONCLUSION: MobiGuide's feasibility was demonstrated by a working prototype for the AF and GDM domains, which is usable by patients and clinicians, achieving high compliance to self-measurement recommendations, while enhancing the satisfaction of patients and care providers.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clinical decision-support systems; Computer-interpretable clinical guidelines; Mobile health; Patient guidance system

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28347441     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2017.02.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Med Inform        ISSN: 1386-5056            Impact factor:   4.046


  22 in total

Review 1.  Real-Time Remote-Health Monitoring Systems: a Review on Patients Prioritisation for Multiple-Chronic Diseases, Taxonomy Analysis, Concerns and Solution Procedure.

Authors:  K I Mohammed; A A Zaidan; B B Zaidan; O S Albahri; M A Alsalem; A S Albahri; Ali Hadi; M Hashim
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2019-06-11       Impact factor: 4.460

Review 2.  Systematic Review of Real-time Remote Health Monitoring System in Triage and Priority-Based Sensor Technology: Taxonomy, Open Challenges, Motivation and Recommendations.

Authors:  O S Albahri; A S Albahri; K I Mohammed; A A Zaidan; B B Zaidan; M Hashim; Omar H Salman
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2018-03-22       Impact factor: 4.460

3.  Ideating Mobile Health Behavioral Support for Compliance to Therapy for Patients with Chronic Disease: A Case Study of Atrial Fibrillation Management.

Authors:  Mor Peleg; Wojtek Michalowski; Szymon Wilk; Enea Parimbelli; Silvia Bonaccio; Dympna O'Sullivan; Martin Michalowski; Silvana Quaglini; Marc Carrier
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2018-10-13       Impact factor: 4.460

4.  A Review of Challenges and Opportunities in Machine Learning for Health.

Authors:  Marzyeh Ghassemi; Tristan Naumann; Peter Schulam; Andrew L Beam; Irene Y Chen; Rajesh Ranganath
Journal:  AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc       Date:  2020-05-30

5.  Decision Support in Diabetes Care: The Challenge of Supporting Patients in Their Daily Living Using a Mobile Glucose Predictor.

Authors:  Carmen Pérez-Gandía; Gema García-Sáez; David Subías; Agustín Rodríguez-Herrero; Enrique J Gómez; Mercedes Rigla; M Elena Hernando
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2018-03

6.  Patient generated health data use in clinical practice: A systematic review.

Authors:  George Demiris; Sarah J Iribarren; Katherine Sward; Solim Lee; Rumei Yang
Journal:  Nurs Outlook       Date:  2019-04-26       Impact factor: 3.250

7.  Application of Mobile Technology for Disease and Treatment Monitoring of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Among Pregnant Women: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Nidhi Garg; Shaima Kattungal Arunan; Sandeep Arora; Kiranjeet Kaur
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2020-10-29

Review 8.  Real-Time Remote Health-Monitoring Systems in a Medical Centre: A Review of the Provision of Healthcare Services-Based Body Sensor Information, Open Challenges and Methodological Aspects.

Authors:  O S Albahri; A A Zaidan; B B Zaidan; M Hashim; A S Albahri; M A Alsalem
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2018-07-25       Impact factor: 4.460

Review 9.  Real-Time Fault-Tolerant mHealth System: Comprehensive Review of Healthcare Services, Opens Issues, Challenges and Methodological Aspects.

Authors:  A S Albahri; A A Zaidan; O S Albahri; B B Zaidan; M A Alsalem
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2018-06-23       Impact factor: 4.460

Review 10.  The use of mobile health interventions for gestational diabetes mellitus: a descriptive literature review.

Authors:  Maryam Zahmatkeshan; Somayyeh Zakerabasali; Mojtaba Farjam; Yousef Gholampour; Maryam Seraji; Azita Yazdani
Journal:  J Med Life       Date:  2021 Mar-Apr
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