| Literature DB >> 33449213 |
Jamie Zhen1, John K Marshall2, Geoffrey C Nguyen3,4, Ashish Atreja5, Neeraj Narula6.
Abstract
Technological advances now permit self-management strategies using mobile applications which could greatly benefit patient care. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the use of the inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) digital health monitoring platform, HealthPROMISE, leads to better quality of care and improved health outcomes in IBD patients. IBD patients were recruited in gastroenterology clinics and asked to install the HealthPROMISE application onto their smartphones. Patient satisfaction, quality of care, quality of life, patient symptoms, and resource utilization metrics were collected throughout the study and sent directly to their healthcare teams. Patients with abnormal symptom/SIBDQ scores were flagged for their physicians to follow up. After one-year, patient outcome metrics were compared to baseline values. Overall, out of 59 patients enrolled in the study, 32 patients (54%) logged into the application at least once during the study period. The number of IBD-related ER visits/hospitalizations in the year of use compared to the prior year demonstrated a significant decrease from 25% of patients (8/32) to 3% (1/32) (p = 0.03). Patients also reported an increase in their understanding of the nature/causes of their condition after using the application (p = 0.026). No significant changes were observed in the number of quality indicators met (p = 0.67) or in SIBDQ scores (p = 0.48). Given the significant burden of IBD, there is a need to develop effective management strategies. This study demonstrated that digital health monitoring platforms may aid in reducing the number of ER visits and hospitalizations in IBD patients.Entities:
Keywords: Digital health monitoring; HealthPROMISE; IBD; Inflammatory bowel disease; Telemedicine; eHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33449213 PMCID: PMC7808932 DOI: 10.1007/s10916-021-01706-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Syst ISSN: 0148-5598 Impact factor: 4.460
Fig. 1Individual patient view of the HealthPROMISE live dashboard showing details of all domains within ePROs (collected from the app) with longitudinal trends (courtesy Rx.Health, All4IBD program)
Fig. 2Population-level view of the HealthPROMISE live dashboard with columns for ePROs (collected from the app), inflammatory markers (collected from electronic health records) and alerting feature (based on clinical logic and best practices). The care teams can sort patients at highest risk and send them texts, chat links, or initiate video visits from the dashboard itself (courtesy Rx.Health, All4IBD program)
Patient demographics
| Age (years), median (IQR) | 28.5 (22–38) |
Male Female | 20 (62.5) 12 (37.5) |
Crohn’s disease Ulcerative colitis | 23 (71.9) 9 (28.1) |
Active smoker Past smoker Non-smoker | 5 (15.6) 5 (15.6) 22 (68.8) |
Patient satisfaction at baseline and after 1 year of HealthPROMISE use
| Question | Number of patients who strongly agreed or agreed at baseline | Number of patients who strongly agreed or agreed after 1 year of HealthPROMISE use | |
|---|---|---|---|
| I am satisfied with the patient education at McMaster University Medical Centre | 30/31 | 29/31 | 1.0 |
| I am satisfied that my doctor told me about my condition, the treatment options and how I can stay healthy. | 31/31 | 31/31 | 1.0 |
| I am satisfied that I understand the nature and causes of my health condition | 23/31 | 30/31 | |
| I am satisfied that I know the different medical treatment options available for my health condition | 28/31 | 30/31 | 0.61 |
| I am satisfied that I know how to prevent further problems with my health condition | 23/31 | 28/31 | 0.18 |
Fig. 3IBD-related ER/hospitalization utilization in the year prior to enrollment and the year post-enrollment into HealthPROMISE