| Literature DB >> 32970312 |
Abstract
Those suffering with serious mental illness (SMI), such as psychotic disorders, experience life expectancy 15 years shorter than the general population. Cardiovascular disease is the biggest cause of death in those with psychotic disease and many risk factors may be limited by healthy lifestyle choices. Text messaging interventions represent mobile health (mHealth), a nascent way to deliver physical health care to those suffering with a psychotic disorder. This paper aims to review the literature on the feasibility of text messaging to support the delivery of physical health care in those with a psychotic disorder. A thorough electronic database literature review of Medline via Ovid, Embase, APA Psycinfo, Scopus, Cochrane and Web of Science was conducted. Articles were included if text messaging was used as an intervention targeting the physical health of patients with psychotic disorders. A final sample of 11 articles satisfied the eligibility criteria, of which, 3 were ongoing randomised controlled trials. Of the 8 completed trials, all demonstrated the promising feasibility of text messaging, assessed via quotes, conversation samples, response rates, questionnaires or directly based on physical results. 36% of studies analysed those with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, 55% with SMI and 9% with schizophrenia and psychotic disorders, mood disorders or anxiety disorders. Text messaging was used as motivation or reminders (91%), service delivery (27%) or social support (27%) with studies targeting multiple themes simultaneously. This review highlights compelling evidence for the feasibility of text messaging for improvement of physical health in those suffering with psychotic disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Physical health; Psychotic disorder; Telemedicine; Text messaging
Year: 2020 PMID: 32970312 PMCID: PMC7593303 DOI: 10.1007/s11126-020-09847-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatr Q ISSN: 0033-2720
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the literature review process [23]
A table to show the outcomes measured and their corresponding evidence for completed trials
| Citation: | Outcome(s): | Evidence: |
|---|---|---|
| [ | Feasibility Effectiveness | Patient quotes |
| [ | Willingness | Text message exchanges Lifestyle behaviours related to diet, physical activity and sleep were primary topics of conversation |
| [ | Feasibility | Higher step counts correlated with greater weight loss: every 1000 step/day increase correlated with a 1.78lbs (0.81 kg) weight decrease ( Wearable worn on 86.2% of study days |
| [ | Willingness Feasibility | 94.8% smartphone ownership 89.5% mainly used smartphone for text messaging 82.2% willing to text message 100% belief in possibility of use to enhance services Only 58.4% believed that smartphone based interventions used daily could be used to cause positive changes in the consumer’s mental and physical health |
| [ | Feasibility Acceptability | Average of 4.6 days/week exercised in home 8 weeks (target 3 days) Average 73 mins/week (target 90 mins) = 81% target No SMS sent: 24.3/40 days exercised = 61% SMS sent: 11.2/16 days exercised = 70% 80% agreed that SMS reminders could support exercise at home 70% agreed that receiving SMS messages didn’t bother them 80% agreed that they regularly read the SMS reminders sent to them |
| [ | Feasibility Acceptability Effectiveness | Two-way text message group showed a significant increase in step count/day compared to baseline at week 6 (+1804.8 steps, 73% said text messaging reminders helped them initiate walking 80% said receiving text messages didn’t bother them 86% said sending text messages didn’t bother them |
| [ | Usability Acceptability | Text messaging app used on 94% of study days 98% response rate to messages sent by staff All patients reported moderate to high motivation to exercise at the end of the study Text message conversations were the most favoured aspect of the app |
| [ | Feasibility | 36% met criteria for statistically significant reduction in CV risk At 6 months, 45% below baseline weight, 45% improved fitness 89% satisfaction with programme, including mHealth and Facebook 89% thought activities were useful 78% thought programme helped them move towards health goal Wellness peer support praised Participants appreciated the text message reminders and found those that encouraged physical activity to be particularly helpful and motivating |