| Literature DB >> 30912756 |
Todd Matthew Manini1, Tonatiuh Mendoza2, Manoj Battula3, Anis Davoudi4, Matin Kheirkhahan3, Mary Ellen Young5, Eric Weber6, Roger Benton Fillingim6, Parisa Rashidi4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic pain, including arthritis, affects about 100 million adults in the United States. Complexity and diversity of the pain experience across time and people and its fluctuations across and within days show the need for valid pain reports that do not rely on patient's long-term recall capability. Smartwatches can be used as digital ecological momentary assessment (EMA) tools for real-time collection of pain scores. Smartwatches are generally less expensive than smartphones, are highly portable, and have a simpler user interface, providing an excellent medium for continuous data collection and enabling a higher compliance rate.Entities:
Keywords: ecological momentary assessment (EMA); focus group; patient-reported outcomes (PRO); smartwatch
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30912756 PMCID: PMC6454335 DOI: 10.2196/10044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1The PROMPT (Patient Reported Outcome of Mood, Pain, and faTigue) framework: the smartwatch app and the server application.
Figure 2The Samsung Gear S smartwatch used in the PROMPT (Patient Reported Outcome of Mood, Pain, and faTigue) study. Ratings are entered by rotating the bezel to select pain ratings. The color schema also changes as the ratings are increased or decreased. Ratings are saved by pressing the top button (physical button), located on top of the bezel.
Figure 3Users can choose activities by rotating the bezel.
Focus group questions summarized according to their topic.
| Topic | Questions |
| a. Smartwatch impression | a.1 What is your opinion about watch size and its accessory bands? |
| a.2 What is your first impression of the watch itself? | |
| b. PROMPT interface | b.1 Do you like the PROMPT color schema for PRO assessment? |
| b.2 Do you like the app flow? Any need for a back button? | |
| b.3 Would you like to add emoticons to the assessment screen? | |
| b.4 Do you like the activity icons? Would you prefer icons or text? | |
| b.5 What type of notification do you prefer to receive, and why? | |
| b.6 Is the text large enough to read? | |
| c. PRO assessment | c.1 How many times per day would be too burdensome to ask you? |
| c.2 Other issues you would like the researchers and doctors to know? | |
| d. Study logistics | d.1 How likely are you to participate in a one-year research study asking you to wear the smartwatch daily for up to a year? |
| d.2 What other options would help you to participate? |
Figure 4Wong-Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale (left). PRO assessment with and without emoticons. Source: Wong-Baker FACES Foundation.
Characteristics of the focus group participants (N=19).
| Characteristics | Total | Female | Male | |
| Participants, n (%) | 19 | 14 (74) | 5 (26) | .01 |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 72.7 (6.1) | 72.0 (6.7) | 75.5 (5.8) | .22 |
| Access to Wi-Fi, n (%) | 17 (89) | —a | — | — |
| Own a smartphone, n (%) | 14 (74) | — | — | — |
| Own a smartwatch, n (%) | 1 (5) | 1 (7) | 0 (0) | 1 |
| Active in water, n (%) | 4 (21) | — | — | — |
aData were not collected per female/male, only collectively.
Themes and subthemes reported by the focus group participants (percentages are the percent reported with respect to all the other themes).
| Topic, themes, and subthemes | n (%) | |||
| Time displaya | 1 (5) | |||
| Appsa | 3 (16) | |||
| Water resistancea | 1 (5) | |||
| Backlighta | 1 (5) | |||
| Securityd | 1 (5) | |||
| Weathera | 3 (16) | |||
| Emaila | 1 (5) | |||
| Phonea | 2 (11) | |||
| Heavy bodyb | 2 (11) | |||
| Accessory bandsa | 4 (21) | |||
| Band durabilityc | 1 (5) | |||
| Step counta, heart ratea, GPSa | 2 (11) | |||
| Accessibility for color-blind individualsc | 2 (11) | |||
| Customized color schemac | 3 (16) | |||
| Mapping colors to mental statesc | 3 (16) | |||
| Icon ambiguityb | 2 (11) | |||
| Expanded list of activitiesc | 1 (5) | |||
| Customized list of activitiesc | 1 (5) | |||
| Activity intensityc | 1 (5) | |||
| Emoticonsc | 4 (21) | |||
| Notification preferencesc | 3 (16) | |||
| Disruptive notificationsd | 2 (11) | |||
| Notification type customizationc | 1 (5) | |||
| Context-dependent notificationsc | 1 (5) | |||
| Silent modea | 1 (5) | |||
| Number of notificationsd | 7 (37) | |||
| Start time customizationc | 1 (5) | |||
| Easy setupa | 4 (21) | |||
| Automatic messagesa | 1 (5) | |||
| Speech inputc | 1 (5) | |||
| Larger font sizec | 3 (16) | |||
| Large iconsc | 3 (16) | |||
| Notification customization for visually or hearing impairedc | 1 (5) | |||
| Scale visual aidc | 2 (11) | |||
| Neutral value visual aidc | 1 (5) | |||
| Back navigation buttonc | 1 (5) | |||
| Ability to indicate fluctuation and intermittent painc | 2 (11) | |||
| Ability to indicate activity dependent measuresc | 1 (5) | |||
| Ability to indicate pain locationc | 1 (5) | |||
| Weekly or daily summaryc | 1 (5) | |||
| Ability to indicate medication usec | 3 (16) | |||
| Ability to indicate stiffnessc | 1 (5) | |||
| Receiving more positive feedback instead of negativec | 4 (21) | |||
| Ability to track sleepc | 3 (16) | |||
| Use during travelc | 1 (5) | |||
| Frequent clinic visit, Impact on personal data pland | 1 (5) | |||
aPositive existing feature (I liked it).
bUndesirable existing feature (I did not like it).
cDesired future feature (I would like to see that).
dUndesirable/concerning future feature (I would be concerned about that).
Selected participants’ quotes on discussed themes grouped according to topic.
| Topic and subtopic | Example quotes | |
| Function | “Can you download its apps like on a smartphone?” | |
| Apps | “I would wear it as it is; it is excellent, but the more apps, the better.” | |
| Appearance | “I like the extra band, lighter.” | |
| Sensors | “Can its GPS be used to track if I am at the gym?” | |
| Color schema | “When it shows my good mood as green, I don’t like it, not my mental model of happiness.” | |
| Icons | “Standing can represent both washing dishes or cooking.” | |
| Notifications | “My hearing is bad, and I might be active and might not see it.” | |
| Usability & accessibility | “Voice-activated recording might be helpful to record details of activities.” | |
| Assessment scales | “For feeling down, is the scale going up or down?” | |
| Flow | “I would like an erase or back button when I make a mistake.” | |
| Capturing pain | “I have intermittent pain walking for five minutes, then no pain, coming and going.” | |
| Other patient-reported outcomes | “It is important to emphasize when you are feeling good, feeling up. To emphasize fatigue, it is negative, and it is going to be measured in a negative way.” | |
| Study participation | “How would the watch affect my data plan usage?” | |
Figure 5Participant preferences on various user interface issues related to PROMPT (Patient Reported Outcome of Mood, Pain, and faTigue). Bars indicate the percentage of users who responded "Yes".
Figure 6Participant preferences on notifications type.
Figure 7Participant preferences on notifications frequency.
Figure 8Different pain assessment scales used before and after the focus group. NRS: Numerical Pain Rating Scale; VRS: Verbal Pain Rating Scale.