| Literature DB >> 31758765 |
Elske Ammenwerth1, Robert Modre-Osprian2, Bettina Fetz3, Susanne Gstrein3, Susanne Krestan3, Jakob Dörler4, Peter Kastner2, Stefan Welte5, Clemens Rissbacher3, Gerhard Pölzl4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heart failure is a major health problem associated with frequent hospital admissions. HerzMobil Tirol is a multidisciplinary postdischarge disease management program for heart failure patients to improve quality of life, prevent readmission, and reduce mortality and health care costs. It uses a telemonitoring system that is incorporated into a network of specialized heart failure nurses, physicians, and hospitals. Patients are equipped with a mobile phone, a weighing scale, and a blood pressure and heart rate monitor for daily acquisition and transmission of data on blood pressure, heart rate, weight, well-being, and drug intake. These data are transmitted daily and regularly reviewed by the network team. In addition, patients are scheduled for 3 visits with the network physician and 2 visits with the heart failure nurse within 3 months after hospitalization for acute heart failure.Entities:
Keywords: delivery of health care, integrated; heart failure; program evaluation; telemedicine
Year: 2018 PMID: 31758765 PMCID: PMC6857958 DOI: 10.2196/cardio.9936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Cardio ISSN: 2561-1011
Figure 1Integrated care process of HerzMobil Tirol. NT-proBNP: N-terminal prohormone of brain natriuretic peptide; HF: heart failure.
Figure 2Stakeholder-specific dashboards of the Web-based telehealth system HerzMobil. Top chart: systolic (red) and diastolic (blue) blood pressure with daily measurement (−) and target range (red/blue area). Middle chart: heart rate with daily measurements (green dots) and target range (yellow area). Bottom chart: weight with daily measurements (blue dots) and target range (yellow area). Red exclamation marks: automatic alert on an event that has to be dealt with (eg, sudden change of weight or reaching predefined alerting values). Upper right: demographics of the patients (name, birth date, and address) as well as number of weekly data transmissions. Lower right: communication notes between physicians and nurses on this patient.
Number and age of participants.
| Participants | All | Male | Female |
| Recruited for study, n (%) | 50 (100) | 37 (74) | 13 (26) |
| Never beginner, n (%) | 7 (100) | 5 (71) | 2 (29) |
| Dropped out or died during study, n (%) | 8 (100) | 5 (62) | 3 (38) |
| Completed participation in study, n (%) | 35 (100) | 27 (77) | 8 (23) |
| Mean age of participants in years (minimum-maximum) | 67.1 (43-86) | 65.6 (43-6) | 71.5 (43-85) |
| Completed all questionnaires (return rate) | 28 (80) | 23 (85) | 5 (63) |
Figure 3Change of health status (Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire score; n=28; 0=minimum, 100=maximum) at baseline and after 3 months.
Figure 4European Heart Failure Self-Care Behavior scale, revised into a 9-item scale, self-care behavior scores (n=29) after 3 months.
Figure 5Aggregated results from the Information System Success Model survey (n=28) after 3 months (minimum=0%, maximum=100%). Information quality 95.2%; system quality 92.3%; service quality 95.8%; user satisfaction 95.2%; net benefit 87.1%; and intention to use 86%.
Figure 6Selected items from the Information System Success Model survey (n=28) after 3 months.
Figure 7Change of health status (Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire, KCCQ score) in HerzMobil Tirol at baseline and after 3 months in comparison with 4 other studies.