| Literature DB >> 33105099 |
Roschelle L Fritz1, Marian Wilson1, Gordana Dermody2, Maureen Schmitter-Edgecombe3, Diane J Cook3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Poorly managed pain can lead to substance use disorders, depression, suicide, worsening health, and increased use of health services. Most pain assessments occur in clinical settings away from patients' natural environments. Advances in smart home technology may allow observation of pain in the home setting. Smart homes recognizing human behaviors may be useful for quantifying functional pain interference, thereby creating new ways of assessing pain and supporting people living with pain.Entities:
Keywords: multiple methods; pain; remote monitoring; sensors; smart homes
Year: 2020 PMID: 33105099 PMCID: PMC7679205 DOI: 10.2196/23943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Multiple methods analytic processing of qualitative and quantitative data for a clinician-guided approach to machine learning (ML).
Figure 2Abnormal pain-related behaviors observed in the sensor data, with 6 overarching themes.
Demographic characteristics of the study sample (N=11).
| Characteristics | Results | |
| Age (years), mean (range) | 85.72 (69-92) | |
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| Female | 9 (82) |
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| Male | 2 (18) |
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| Married | 1 (9) |
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| Divorced | 1 (9) |
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| Widowed | 9 (82) |
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| High school (some or graduated) | 2 (18) |
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| College (some or graduated with Bachelor’s) | 7 (64) |
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| Graduate School (Master’s or Doctorate) | 1 (9) |
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| Living independently | 11 (100)a |
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| Living alone | 11 (100) |
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| Uses assistive personnel (excluding housekeeping)b | 2 (18) |
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| Uses a housekeeper | 10 (91) |
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| Uses assistive equipmentc | 4 (36) |
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| Acute (duration=0.25-14 days; mean duration 6.8 days) | 8 (30) |
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| Flare (duration=2-8 days; mean duration 6.6 days) | 19 (70) |
aOne participant entered assisted living after 17 months in the study.
bAssistive tasks: donning compression stockings (independent participant), medication administration, showering (assisted-living participant).
cEquipment: 4-wheeled walker, electric scooter, prosthetics.
Themes representing pain-related behaviors.
| Themes (activity attributes) | Participant-reported pain | Nursing report of participants’ behaviors | Sensors informing themes | Meaningful sensor combinations | Sensor type |
| Sleep (rhythm, length, location, quality) | Neck, leg, knee, hip pain | “slept in,” “moved to recliner,” “increased nap time,” “awake in night” | General bedroom, bed, recliner | <Bed-Toilet>, <Recliner-Toilet>, <Bed-Recliner>, <Bed-Bedroom>, <Bed-Kitchen> | Passive infrared (PIR) |
| Walking (speed, rests, breaks) | Fall, leg, knee, hip pain; chest pain | “shortness of breath,” “resting more frequently when walking” | Bedroom, bed, recliner, toilet, hallway | <Recliner-Toilet>, <Bed-Toilet>, <Hallway-Hallway> | PIR |
| Grooming (done, not done) | Fall, abdominal pain | “has not showered for 2 days,”a “help with grooming” | Bathroom, bathroom sink | <General Bathroom Area-Bathroom Sink> (Quantity and duration) | PIR |
| Time spent out of home | Fall, neck, leg, knee, abdominal pain | “didn’t go to Bridge night,” “didn’t go shopping” | Main entry | <Main Entry-Hallway>, <Absence of sensor events> | Magnetic contact (door use) |
| Visitors (Social, health workers) | Fall, neck, leg, abdominal pain | “now has home health,” “caregiver at bedtime,” “daughter visit for 3 daysa to help” | General living room, recliner, kitchen sink, hallway, bathroom sink | Any 2 sensors with virtually concurrent ON signals (<0.01 seconds apart) located greater than 10 feet apart | PIR |
| Overall activity level (in 24 hours) | Fall; leg, hip, abdominal pain; chest pain | “didn’t attend exercise class,” “didn’t feel like doing much, just laid on sofa,” “mostly in bed for 2 days”a | All sensors | Total number of sensor events in 24 hours, room activity length and variety; account for time out of home | PIR, magnetic contact (door use) |
aNursing record contained actual dates of participant-reported pain events.