| Literature DB >> 29948962 |
Tanja S Jørgensen1, Marie Skougaard1, Peter C Taylor2, Hans C Asmussen3, Anne Lee4, Louise Klokker1, Louise Svejstrup5, Irina Mountian6, Henrik Gudbergsen1, Lars Erik Kristensen7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29948962 PMCID: PMC6132441 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-018-0306-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Fig. 1The ava® e-Device: contents of the ava® kit (a); key features of ava® (b). The ava® kit comes in a storage case with the ava® device, a user manual, a welcome booklet giving an introduction to and overview of ava®, a help line contact card to assist patients with any questions or concerns they may have about ava®, an electrical charger (including regional plug), 2 spare needle caps (green), a USB/micro USB cable, and a reusable dose-dispenser cartridge that does not contain a needle, syringe or any medication, which allows patients to practice and explore the injection process. e-Device electromechanical device
Fig. 2The Parker Model used to gain stakeholder input on the design and implementation of ava®. Concept mapping and participatory design were used to gather the patients’ perception of the relevance of the e-Device, and stakeholder evaluation provided a broader perspective of both the relevance and the implementation of the e-Device through the engagement of healthcare professionals, healthcare managers, a device specialist and an economist, in addition to patients. e-Device electromechanical device
Concepts produced from patient statements regarding the e-Device in the concept mapping workshops
| Concepts (clusters) | Sub-clusters | Patient statements |
|---|---|---|
| Design and handling of the device | Manageability (simple) | Easy to use/simple set-up |
| Technical features and additional equipment | Keep it simple | Main function: take the medication |
| Concerns | Will it be too much trouble? | Makes me independent/not flexible to the life I live |
| Enthusiasm | Very useful | Very helpful for those who do not like needles |
e-Device electromechanical device
Central findings and prototypes produced from PD sessions with patients
| Central findings from the PD sessions with the patient | Patient prototypes |
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| User does not like needles; the concept of ‘ava®’ is well received |
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| No issues with needles—syringe is simple/ideal and is user controlled; doesn’t like automated systems |
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| Syringe is ideal—if the needle is covered |
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| The ‘ava®’ is big, clumsy and heavy—the design makes this user ‘feel worse’ |
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e-Device electromechanical device, PD participatory design
Perspectives identified by SE of the applicability and relevance of introducing an e-Device to self-administer CZP for patients with rheumatic diseases
| Key stakeholder perspectives and suggestions identified through SE interviews |
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| All stakeholders: the e-Device is ergonomic, fits well in the palm of the hand, easy to handle, yet relatively large. They found the dose dispenser cartridge easy to manage, though large when including the needle cap |
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| Stakeholders: unmet need is flexibility in terms of the timing of injections. Most patients are experienced and capable of administering their medication on a schedule that best suits them. The patients stressed the importance of this flexibility to feel empowered in relation to their disease and treatment. A suggested solution was to set up the e-Device with slots of a few days for injections instead of fixed dates |
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| HCPs: the injection log may be helpful for patients who forget to take their medication, adding to treatment safety, and the option to use the injection log in consultations with the patient is an advantage |
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| HCPs: the e-Device would be easy for patients to learn, but would not save time for nurses, who would need to instruct each patient on how to use the e-Device. More time may need to be spent by both the patient and the HCP if the patient forgets to bring the e-Device to consultations and additional consultations are required as a result. The potential need for a physician to be present during a nurse consultation in the case of a change in dose, this would result in extra time consumption for the physician |
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| HCPs: the e-Device should be able to communicate with the electronic systems already used in hospitals |
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| All stakeholders: not relevant for patients happy with self-injection via the standard route, but the e-Device might be introduced as a choice to patients starting CZP treatment |
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| The economist, member of RADS, and HCPs: decisions regarding the choice of primary treatment prescribed to newly diagnosed patients are made at a national level; if the price of the e-Device was the same as for the standard route of CZP administration, then patient preferences and the injection log may be good arguments for the use of the e-Device |
CZP certolizumab pegol, e-Device electromechanical device, HCP healthcare professional, RADS the Danish council for the use of expensive hospital medicines, SE stakeholder evaluation
| The Parker Model is a composite, qualitative research model designed to evaluate the development and implementation of new medical device technologies. |
| The Parker Model combines three distinct methodologies (concept mapping, participatory design, and stakeholder evaluation) which support the flow of information between participants, helping to elucidate key themes influencing user responses to new device technologies. |
| This study used a new electromechanical self-injection device (e-Device) to face validate the Parker Model. Feedback from patients and other key stakeholders demonstrated that the model comprehensively captured all constraining concepts related to the device’s design and use, generated feasible solutions to overcome these constraints, and was associated with patients reporting high levels of empowerment. |