| Literature DB >> 30389652 |
Harry Tunnell1, Anthony Faiola2, Davide Bolchini1, Rebecca Bartlett Ellis3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study investigates patient-centered mobile health (mHealth) technology in terms of the secondary user experience (UX). Specifically, it examines how personal mobile technology, under patient control, can be used to improve patient-provider communication about the patient's health care during their first visit to a provider. Common ground, a theory about language use, is used as the theoretical basis to examine interactions. A novel concept of this study is that it is one of the first empirical studies to explore the relative meaningfulness of a secondary UX for specific health care tasks.Entities:
Keywords: medical informatics; medication reconciliation; personal health record
Year: 2018 PMID: 30389652 PMCID: PMC6238098 DOI: 10.2196/11131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Constraints on grounding.
| Constrainta | Description |
| Copresence | When A and B are colocated, such as in the same room |
| Visibility | When A and B can see each other |
| Audibility | When A and B talk to each other |
| Contemporality | When B receives messages at about the same time that A produces them |
| Simultaneity | When A and B can send and receive messages simultaneously |
| Sequentiality | When A’s turn and B’s turn cannot occur out of sequence |
| Reviewability | When B can review A’s messages, as in written communication |
| Revisability | When A can revise messages for B before they are seen by others (outside of A and B) |
aAdapted from Grounding in Communication by Clark and Brennan [21].
Constraints on communication comparison chart. X refers to a supported constraint.
| Medium | Copresence | Visibility | Audibility | Contemporality | Simultaneity | Sequentiality | Reviewability | Revisability |
| Face-to-face | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| Telephone | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Video tele-conference | X | X | X | X | X | |||
| Letters | X | X | ||||||
| Email or text | X | X | ||||||
| Mobile phonea | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
aMobile phone as a medium added to table. Table adapted from Grounding in Communication by Clark and Brennan [21].
Collaboration mechanics.
| Categorya | Description (mechanics) |
| Explicit communication | Planned and intentional communication (speaking, writing, gesturing, combining verbal and gestural, and manifesting actions) |
| Information gathering | Gathering information in shared workspaces from others and their activities (basic group awareness, feedthrough, consequential communication, visual evidence, and overhearing explicit communications) |
| Management of shared access | Managing group access to objects within the workspace (obtaining a resource, reserving a resource, and protecting work) |
| Transfer | The movement of objects and tools between people (handoff and deposit) |
aAdapted from Task Analysis for Groupware Usability Evaluation: Modeling Shared-Workspace Tasks with the Mechanics of Collaboration, by Pinelle et al [27].
Figure 1The conceptual model for the research questions.
Figure 2Model of the experimental design.
Figure 3Example Samsung Galaxy Prevail LTE showing the patient and provider buttons. The screen background provides an additional visual cue to users about where they are in the interface. Primary user screens have a white background and secondary user screens a gray background.
Scenario patient medication profile.
| Medication | Dose | Frequency | Reason |
| Metformin ER | 500 mg | Twice/day | Diabetes |
| Lisinopril | 10 mg | Once/day | Blood pressure |
| Atorvastatin | 80 mg | Once/day (night) | Cholesterol |
| Glipizide | 2.5 mg | Three/day with meals | Diabetes |
Figure 4The patient attempts to recall from memory the details of specific medications during the medication reconciliation task.
Figure 5Image used in the prototype to show the patient’s past ailment. Note. Image adapted from Bullosis diabeticorum: Rare presentation in a common disease, by Gupta V, Gulati N, Bahl J, Bajwa J, and Dhawan N, 2014, Case Reports in Endocrinology, p. 2.
Figure 6Example Samsung Galaxy Prevail LTE showing the provider view of the medication screen. The screen background provides an additional visual cue to the user about where they are in the interface. Primary user screens have a white background and secondary user screens a gray background.
Background of participants (12 participants).
| Group | Practice or specialty | |
| APRNa | Geriatric | |
| APRN | Geriatric | |
| Doctor | Internal medicine | |
| Certified nurse midwife | Midwifery | |
| Registered nurse | Intensive care or intravenous team | |
| Doctor | Internal medicine | |
| Doctor | Pulmonary medicine | |
| Registered nurse | Case management | |
| Registered nurse | Clinical education | |
| APRN | Internal medicine | |
| Registered nurse | Perioperative nursing | |
| Doctor | General surgery | |
aAPRN: advanced practice registered nurse.
Demographics of participants (12 participants).
| Variable and attribute | Control group, n (%) | Treatment group, n (%) | |
| Male | 2 (17) | 1 (8) | |
| Female | 4 (33) | 5 (42) | |
| 25-34 | 1 (8) | 0 (0) | |
| 35-44 | 3 (25) | 3 (25) | |
| 45-54 | 2 (17) | 3 (25) | |
| <1 | 1 (17) | 0 (0) | |
| 1-5 | 3 (25) | 0 (0) | |
| 6-10 | 2 (17) | 1 (8) | |
| 11-15 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | |
| 16-20 | 0 (0) | 1 (8) | |
| 21-25 | 0 (0) | 2 (17) | |
| > 25 | 0 (0) | 2 (17) | |
Descriptive statistics for encounter and task times for the 6 participants in the control group and 6 participants in the treatment group.
| Task | Control group | Treatment group | ||||||
| Mean (SD) | Median | Min-Max | Mean (SD) | Median | Min-Max | |||
| Encountera | 0:12:45 (0:06:19) | 0:11:09 | 0:06:35-0:25:05 | 0:12:22 (0:02:38) | 0:12:30 | 0:08:47-0:15:40 | ||
| 0:02:52 (0:02:33) | 0:02:08 | 0:01:12-0:08:02 | 0:02:40c (0:01:36c) | 0:02:02c | 0:01:44c-0:05:53c | |||
| Educationd | 0:00:18 (0:00:44) | 0:00:00 | 0:00:00-0:01:50 | 0:00:19c (0:00:31c) | 0:00:00c | 0:00:00c-0:01:13c | ||
| 0:03:03 (0:00:58) | 0:02:37 | 0:02:33-0:05:02 | 0:02:24f (0:01:05f) | 0:02:11f | 0:01:09f-0:04:14f | |||
| Educationd | 0:00:17 (0:00:29) | 0:00:00 | 0:00:00-0:01:13 | 0:00:36f (0:00:58f) | 0:00:00f | 0:00:00f-0:02:14f | ||
| 0:01:25f (0:01:43f) | 0:00:57f | 0:00:00f-0:04:10f | 0:02:46f (0:01:38f) | 0:02:23f | 0:00:54f-0:05:04f | |||
| Educationd | 0:00:00f (0:00:00f) | 0:00:00f | 0:00:00f-0:00:00f | 0:00:23f (0:00:57f) | 0:00:00f | 0:00:00f-0:02:21f | ||
| Total time spent on required tasksh | 0:07:57 (0:02:39) | 0:07:40 | 0:04:41-0:11:25 | 0:09:11 (0:01:49) | 0:09:12 | 0:06:45-0:11:16 | ||
aThe percentage of the total encounter time spent on the three tasks: control group=67%; treatment group=76%.
bRash: time discussing the problem.
cIndicates a task for which partial common ground was achieved.
dThe mean times for any patient education related to a specific task.
eMed reconciliation: time discussing medication reconciliation.
fIndicates a task for which common ground was achieved.
gHistory: time discussing medical history.
hThe total time spent on the three tasks: Rash, med reconciliation, and history.
Subscale reliability analysis.
| Characteristics | Cronbach alpha | Item numbers |
| Satisfaction | .824 | 3 |
| Common ground | .892 | 6 |
| Performance | .981 | 4 |
Descriptive statistics for the posttest questionnaire subscales.
| Group | Satisfaction | Common ground | Performance | |
| Mean (SD) | 5.83 (1.44) | 5.94 (1.25) | 5.83 (1.54) | |
| Minimum-maximum | 3.00-7.00 | 3.83-7.00 | 3.00-7.00 | |
| Mean (SD) | 5.67 (1.01) | 5.75 (0.43) | 5.25 (0.98) | |
| Minimum-maximum | 4.33-6.67 | 5.17-6.17 | 4.00-6.00 | |
Figure 7The patient provides accurate medication information by using the prototype to augment his memory, making the attainment of common ground possible.