Literature DB >> 33393931

An Automated Text Messaging System (Tonsil-Text-To-Me) to Improve Tonsillectomy Perioperative Experience: Exploratory Qualitative Usability and Feasibility Study.

Nathan Farias1, Benjamin Rose-Davis2, Paul Hong3,4, Lori Wozney5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Inexperience and forgetting perioperative care instruction are significant drivers of parental stress during pediatric tonsillectomy care. With the widespread use of mobile technology, parents now desire a system that provides them with information that is timely, accessible, and comprehensive. Tonsil-Text-To-Me (TTTM) is a text messaging system that sends out automated and timed texts to parents of children who are undergoing tonsillectomy.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to pilot-test TTTM to assess for feasibility and usability and collect suggestions for system improvements desired by parents from a pediatric otolaryngology text message service.
METHODS: Parents of pediatric patients who were being scheduled for tonsillectomy with or without adenoidectomy were prospectively enrolled. An exploratory qualitative study using a semistructured interview guide was performed after parents received the automated texts 2 weeks before and 1 week after their child's surgery.
RESULTS: A total of 7 parents were interviewed (data saturation was reached). Participants were all of maternal relation to the patient. Overall, all parents felt that the TTTM service was an improvement to the current standard model of information delivery. Parents also reported that the text messages reduced their anxiety and improved their performance when caring for their children during the perioperative period. No parents expressed privacy concerns about receiving texts and regarding the information included in the messages. Service suggestions showed that parents were eager for more information and had a high threshold for message reception regarding their child's surgical care.
CONCLUSIONS: All parents expressed enthusiasm for a text message service during their child's tonsillectomy perioperative period. The care instructions and reminders provided to parents via automated and timed text messages may be a strategy to improve information delivery in a simple and accessible format that could empower families in their own health care. ©Nathan Farias, Benjamin Rose-Davis, Paul Hong, Lori Wozney. Originally published in JMIR Perioperative Medicine (http://periop.jmir.org), 15.01.2020.

Entities:  

Keywords:  pediatric otolaryngology; perioperative care; short message service; tonsillectomy

Year:  2020        PMID: 33393931     DOI: 10.2196/14601

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JMIR Perioper Med        ISSN: 2561-9128


  3 in total

1.  Automated Intraoperative Short Messaging Service Updates: Quality Improvement Initiative to Relieve Caregivers' Worries.

Authors:  Alexandre Mignault; Éric Tchouaket Nguemeleu; Stephanie Robins; Éric Maillet; Edwige Matetsa; Stéphane Dupuis
Journal:  JMIR Perioper Med       Date:  2022-05-06

2.  The Impact of a Text Messaging Service (Tonsil-Text-To-Me) on Pediatric Perioperative Tonsillectomy Outcomes: Cohort Study With a Historical Control Group.

Authors:  Lori Wozney; Negar Vakili; Jill Chorney; Alexander Clark; Paul Hong
Journal:  JMIR Perioper Med       Date:  2022-09-20

3.  Parental Engagement of a Prototype Electronic Diary in an Ambulatory Setting Following Adenotonsillectomy in Children: A Prospective Cohort Study.

Authors:  Tobial Mchugh; Karen A Brown; Sam J Daniel; Sharmila Balram; Chantal Frigon
Journal:  Children (Basel)       Date:  2021-06-29
  3 in total

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