| Literature DB >> 33949674 |
Anna M Hood1, Cara Nwankwo2, Ashley Walton3, Emily McTate4,5, Naomi Joffe4,5, Charles T Quinn5,6, Maria T Britto5,7,8, James Peugh4,5, Constance A Mara4,5, Lori E Crosby4,5,8.
Abstract
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is associated with significant health challenges that often worsen during adolescence. Living with SCD requires a substantial amount of self-management and mobile health (mHealth) holds considerable promise for assessing and changing behaviors to improve health outcomes. We integrated a mobile app as an adjunct to a group intervention (SCThrive) and hypothesized that more engagement with the mHealth app would increase self-management and self-efficacy for adolescents and young adults (AYA) with SCD. Twenty-six AYA ages 13-21 years (54% female; 46% HbSS genotype; all African-American/Black) received six weekly group sessions (three in-person, three online). Participants were provided with the mobile app (iManage for SCD) to record progress on their self-management goals and log pain and mood symptoms. The Transition Readiness Assessment Questionnaire (TRAQ-5) assessed self-management skills and the Patient Activation Measure (PAM-13) assessed self-efficacy at baseline and post-treatment. Logging on to the app more frequently was associated higher mood ratings (r = .54, CI[.18, .77], p = .006) and lower pain ratings (r = -.48, CI[-.77, -.02], p = .04). Regression analyses demonstrated that after controlling for scores at baseline, the number of logins to the app predicted self-management skills (p = .05, η2 = .17) and possibly self-efficacy (p = .08, η2 = .13). Our study findings indicate that it can be challenging to maintain engagement in mHealth for AYA with SCD, but for those who do engage, there are significant benefits related to self-management, self-efficacy, and managing pain and mood.Entities:
Keywords: AYA; Clinical trial; Mobile health; Mood; Pain; Self-management
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33949674 PMCID: PMC8541694 DOI: 10.1093/tbm/ibab041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Behav Med ISSN: 1613-9860 Impact factor: 3.046
Figure 1 |The relationship between behavioral activation, self-management, and health outcomes
Figure 2 |iManage for SCD App co-designed by AYA with SCD that includes customizable profile, ability to track pain and mood, set self-management goals, and track progress on goals
Themes of self-management goals recorded on the mobile app
| Type of Goal | Example | Percentage of Total Goals Recorded | Percentage of Goals Completed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exercise | “I will exercise every day for the next two weeks” | 18% | 12% |
| Schoolwork | “Finish my make-up homework by Thursday” | 14% | 14% |
| Drink more water | “Drink 3 bottles of water every day between now and next Tuesday” | 11% | 23% |
| Change sleep schedule | “Go to bed by 11 on Wednesday and Monday night” | 11% | 25% |
| Eat more healthfully | “Eat more vegetables for dinner on Thursday” | 7% | 27% |
| Plan for the future | “Take the driving test Thursday early in the morning” | 9% | 15% |
| Change habits | “Turn off my phone for 2 hours Monday – Friday” | 6% | 88% |
| CBT techniques | “Do guided imagery at least one night before bed” | 5% | 12% |
| Family/friends | “Get costume and be Santa Claus for daughter and nieces” | 5% | 50% |
| Chores | “Make my bed four days this week: Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday & Sunday” | 5% | 29% |
| Food | “Cook my famous stuffing for Thanksgiving, Thursday morning” | 5% | 14% |
| Medication Adherence | “Take medicine every day at night” | 4% | 20% |
Note. CBT = Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Figure 3 |The percentage of self-management goals completed by AYA with SCD in relation to their confidence when goals were created on the iManage for SCD app
Pain diary entries for adolescents and young adults with sickle cell disease
| Pain Diary Questions | Number of times response recorded | Number of AYA who responded |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Unplanned (emergency, sudden) doctor’s office or clinic visit | 4 | 4 (15.38) |
| I went to the emergency room | 1 | 1 (3.85) |
| I was in hospital overnight | 9 | 3 (11.54) |
|
| ||
| Tell a Parent/Adult | 24 | 10 (38.46) |
| Rest | 98 | 17 (65.38) |
| Water | 85 | 17 (65.38) |
| Distraction Techniques | 37 | 8 (30.77) |
| Warm Heating Pad | 37 | 11 (42.31) |
| Contacted Sickle Cell Disease Clinic | 5 | 4 (15.38) |
|
| ||
| Acetaminophen | 28 | 5 (19.23) |
| Ibuprofen | 20 | 7 (26.92) |
| Oxycodone | 21 | 8 (30.77) |
| Oxycodone Hydrochloride | 14 | 4 (15.38) |
Note. AYA = adolescents and young adults
Regression models using self-management skills (TRAQ-5) and self-efficacy (PAM-13) as the dependent variables and logging into the mobile app and completing self-management goals (i.e., engagement) as predictors
| Effect |
|
|
|
|
|
| Δ R2 | Fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
| (Intercept) | 2.91 | [1.56, 4.27] | ||||||
| Baseline TRAQ-5 scores | 0.37 | [0.01, 0.74] | .38 | .18 | .05* | .17 | – | |
| Logging into mobile app | 0.04 | [0.00, 0.07] | .40 | .02 | .05* | .17 | .08 | |
| Completed self-management | -0.16 | [-0.35, 0.02] | -.35 | .09 | .08 | .14 | .11† | |
|
| ||||||||
| 95% CI[.00, .50] | ||||||||
|
| ||||||||
| (Intercept) | 61.24 | [31.66, 90.82] | ||||||
| Baseline PAM-13 scores | 0.28 | [-0.10, 0.66] | .29 | .18 | .14 | .09 | – | |
| Logging into mobile app | 0.60 | [-0.08, 1.28] | .36 | .33 | .08 | .13 | .15* | |
| Completed self-management | 0.71 | [-2.91, 4.34] | .08 | 1.75 | .68 | .01 | .01 | |
|
| ||||||||
| 95% CI[.00, .44] |
Note. B represents unstandardized regression weights. LL and UL indicate the lower and upper limits of a confidence interval, respectively. β = standardized regression weights; SE = Standard Error; Partial η 2 = partial eta squared; * = p < .05, † = p < .10