| Literature DB >> 28928110 |
Sigrid Vorrink1, Chantal Huisman1, Helianthe Kort1, Thierry Troosters2, Jan-Willem Lammers3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: If eHealth interventions are not used (properly), their potential benefits cannot be fulfilled. User perceptions of eHealth are an important determinant of its successful implementation. This study examined how patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and their physiotherapists (PHTs) value an eHealth self-management intervention following a period of use.Entities:
Keywords: physical therapists; pulmonary disease, chronic obstructive; self care; telemedicine
Year: 2017 PMID: 28928110 PMCID: PMC5627045 DOI: 10.2196/humanfactors.7196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Hum Factors ISSN: 2292-9495
Figure 1Application. The bar on the left side combines amount and intensity of steps. The physical activity (PA) goal is met when the horizontal stripe (representation of current PA status) is kept in the rising rectangle at all times until the green area is reached. Absolute number of steps and automated encouraging messages linked to current PA progress are also shown.
Figure 2Website for the physiotherapist in Dutch. Above: anonymized overview of the physical activity (PA) goal attainment status of all patients connected to the physiotherapist. Below: detailed PA information of a single subject. The graph on the left shows the PA with the red line and the set PA goal in a blue line. On the upper right scores on PA intensity are shown and on the lower right physiotherapists can sent patients text messages and see an overview of sent and received messages with the current patient.
Figure 3Overview of the methodologies used.
Figure 4Consort flowsheet participants.
Demographics of the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients (N=60).
| Outcome | Mean (SD) or number | |
| Age in years, mean (SD) | 62 (8) | |
| Female | 25 | |
| Male | 35 | |
| Body mass index (kg/m2), mean (SD) | 27 (5) | |
| Forced expiratory volume in 1 second (liters), mean (SD) | 1.71 (0.60) (59 [SD 20]% predicted) | |
| Forced vital capacity (liters), mean (SD) | 3.61 (0.95) (99 [SD 19]% predicted) | |
| 6-minute walking distance (meters), mean (SD) | 486 (84) (83 [SD 15]% predicted) | |
| Average steps/day (weekday), mean (SD) | 5980 (3035) | |
Key findings
| Topic | Patients | Physiotherapists | ||
| The intervention was used on 89.0% (160.2/180) (SDa18.5) of the days in their possession | 10 out of 19 practices spent little time on the intervention | |||
| Easy to learn and use | ||||
| Training not necessary | Training necessary | |||
| Clear, insightful, and stimulating | ||||
| Easy to use | Use of and continuously wearing the mobile phone troublesome for a few patients | |||
| 32% (19/60) owned a mobile phone, 18% (11/60) purchased one after the RCTb | ||||
| Explicit and user-friendly | ||||
| Used to look at PAcdata, adjust PA goals, and to send messages | ||||
| Setting PA goals was considered difficult | ||||
| Reported low use was attributed to time-constraints | ||||
| Tedious additional log-in | ||||
| Sent mostly informative, neutral messages concerning the PA goal | Sent mostly motivating, positive messages concerning the PA goal | |||
| Messages were not perceived as supportive in reaching the PA goal | ||||
| Perceived usefulness | Felt it helped to increase PA | Measure of objective PA data outside the clinical setting | ||
| Made them feel fitter | Ability to see patterns in PA (to monitor exacerbations) | |||
| Tool to start a conversation about PA with the patient | ||||
| Applicability | 58% (35/60) would like to continue to use the intervention | 15 out of 19 practices were interested to use the intervention | ||
| Could be useful in preventing relapse | ||||
| Financing concerns | ||||
| Face-to-face is necessary in addition to monitoring | ||||
| Intervention should be individually tailored to the patient | ||||
| Privacy | Important to have control over the distribution of their data | Important aspect to keep in mind when working with eHealth | ||
aSD: standard deviation.
bRCT: randomized controlled trial.
cPA: physical activity.
Application: Usefulness, Satisfaction, and Ease of use (USE) questionnaire scores (mean [SD]). Scores range from 0-7 (0: totally disagree and 7: totally agree).
| Outcome | Mean (SD) |
| Ease of learning | 5.55 (1.46) |
| Ease of use | 5.09 (1.14) |
| Contentment | 5.06 (1.54) |
| Usability | 4.97 (1.32) |
Feedback on website by physiotherapists.
| Remark | Number of practices |
| There should be a mobile version of the website to use on your mobile phone | 3 |
| Integrate into standard patient software | 3 |
| Patients should receive message notifications | 2 |
| Show intensity scores also in patient overview | 2 |
| Remove year scores (not relevant) | 2 |
| Meaning of scores not always clear (colors) | 2 |
| Add Borg score (rating of perceived exertion) | 1 |
| Graphs were difficult to read | 1 |
| Show week scores in patient overview | 1 |
| Show medication use and other types of exercise on the website | 1 |
| “I don’t trust the intensity scores” | 1 |
Number of messages sent by physiotherapists and patients.
| Users | Text messages sent | Erroneous messages |
| Type/N | N (% of total) | |
| Physiotherapists | Personal: 382 | 41 (10) |
| COPDa patients | 162 | 16 (9) |
aCOPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Types of messages sent. Results are given as frequencies and percentages of total messages sent.
| Type of message | By the physiotherapists | Percentage of total messages (%) | By the COPDa patients | Percentage of total messages (%) |
| Motivating | 241 | 56 | 0 | 0 |
| Informative | 68 | 17 | 117 | 66 |
| Question | 43 | 10 | 11 | 6 |
| Fun or social | 20 | 8 | 34 | 19 |
| Total | 372 | 100 | 162 | 100 |
aCOPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.