| Literature DB >> 29728349 |
David T Liss1, Eloisa Serrano1, Julie Wakeman1, Christine Nowicki1, David R Buchanan2, Ana Cesan2, Tiffany Brown1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Care coordination can be highly challenging to carry out. When care is fragmented across health systems and providers, there is an increased likelihood of hospital readmissions and wasteful health care spending. During and after care transitions, smartphones have the potential to bolster information transfer and care coordination. However, little research has examined patients' perceptions of using smartphones to coordinate care.Entities:
Keywords: delivery of health care; health information technology; mHealth; primary care; smartphone
Year: 2018 PMID: 29728349 PMCID: PMC5960037 DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.9726
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Proposed push notification sent to patient’s smartphone after app detects a potential hospital visit (left: English; right: Spanish).
Participant characteristics for patient focus groups (N=16).
| Characteristic | n (%) | |
| 18-29 | 3 (18.8) | |
| 30-49 | 6 (37.5) | |
| 50-64 | 6 (37.5) | |
| +65 | 1 (6.2) | |
| Female | 9 (56.2) | |
| Male | 7 (43.8) | |
| Non-Hispanic white | 2 (12.5) | |
| Non-Hispanic black/African American | 6 (37.5) | |
| Hispanic/Latino | 8 (50.0) | |
| Diabetes | 7 (43.8) | |
| COPDa, chronic bronchitis or emphysema | 1 (6.2) | |
| Asthma | 4 (25.0) | |
| Hypertension | 8 (50.0) | |
| Coronary artery disease | 0 (0) | |
| Heart failure | 1 (6.2) | |
| Android | 9 (56.3) | |
| iOS | 1 (6.2) | |
| Windows Phone | 1 (6.2) | |
| Other/missing | 5 (31.3) | |
aCOPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Emergent themes from qualitative analysis of patient focus groups.
| Theme | Related quotes |
| Acceptable overall, willing to use app during inpatient stays | I think what’s good about it is to let him know that I’m in the hospital now and come see you soon, because evidently something really seriously happened to me to be in the hospital and to be, like you said, to be sitting in there in a hospital bed. So of course I would want him to know. I think that would be a good app, to let him know. It’s easy, it’s one button.a |
| Limited willingness to use app during low-acuity emergency department visits | I don’t want to bother my doctor with the fact that nobody could get me in, but my fever’s 101, I think I need an antibiotic but it’s not an emergency but my doctor couldn’t see me until next Thursday. So I say, “No,” I’m not actually here, even though I’m here. If I am in the emergency room, I think it would be [good to respond] after you are admitted and they tell you what you have.a |
| Willingness to have location tracked to share important information | I think that it’s really good that it does know where you’re at. Facebook has [location tracking], Google has it, Twitter has it, Instagram has it. Everything has your information. So, to have something that is necessary, something important, it won’t bother me. If all apps have my information, it won’t bother me to have one more.a |
| Barriers to acceptability | The location - the number one thing for me is I am not going to download the app if it is completely going to drain my battery. If it’s just going to use up my whole entire battery from running in the background, I’m not going to want it on my phone and I think a lot of people would agree. If like you said, every time I pass the front of the hospital, I receive an alarm, I’d rather delete it.a |
| Usability: tension between adding features and increasing user burden | If it’s your app, okay, you [have] got to make it personal because if it’s your app, you know, you see apps sometimes, they say hello [name], or hello so and so, it should know that it’s you. See what I’m saying? So maybe when you first get it you would put your name on there and everything. When that alert comes on it’s going to say [name], are you in the hospital? Are you in the emergency room? Well I think the correct thing would be for [my doctor] to know exactly why they are seeing you.a The only thing [my doctor] needs to know is that you’re in the hospital and after you’re out you can go to her and take all the paperwork or she asks you why you were in.a |
aQuote from Spanish-speaking participant translated into English.