| Literature DB >> 34726607 |
Sarah M Goodday1,2, Emma Karlin1, Alexandria Alfarano3, Alexa Brooks1, Carol Chapman1, Rachelle Desille1, Shazia Rangwala1, Daniel R Karlin1,4,5, Hoora Emami6, Nancy Fugate Woods7, Adrien Boch8, Luca Foschini8, Mackenzie Wildman8, Francesca Cormack9,10, Nick Taptiklis9, Abhishek Pratap11,12,13,14, Marzyeh Ghassemi12,15,16, Anna Goldenberg12,17,18,19, Sujay Nagaraj12,17, Elaine Walsh7, Stephen Friend1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several app-based studies share similar characteristics of a light touch approach that recruit, enroll, and onboard via a smartphone app and attempt to minimize burden through low-friction active study tasks while emphasizing the collection of passive data with minimal human contact. However, engagement is a common challenge across these studies, reporting low retention and adherence.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; alternative; app; assessment; design; digital health; engagement; frontline; health care worker; knowledge; sensor; stress; support; wearable
Year: 2021 PMID: 34726607 PMCID: PMC8668021 DOI: 10.2196/32165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Form Res ISSN: 2561-326X
Figure 1Stress and Recovery study design.
Characteristics of the cohort among those who enrolled, completed the study, and did not finish.
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| Enrolled and started the study (N=365), n (%) | Retaineda (n=297), n (%) | DNFb (n=68)c, n (%) | |||||||
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| .16d | |||||||||
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| 18-25 | 47 (12.88) | 37 (12.46) | 10 (14.71) |
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| 26-35 | 168 (46.03) | 129 (43.43) | 39 (57.35) |
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| 36-45 | 78 (21.37) | 67 (22.56) | 11 (16.18) |
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| >46 | 72 (19.73) | 64 (21.55) | 8 (11.76) |
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| .85d | |||||||||
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| Female | 325 (89.04) | 264 (88.89) | 61 (89.71) |
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| Male | 40 (10.96) | 33 (11.11) | 7 (10.29) |
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| .35e | |||||||||
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| White | 302 (82.74) | 242 (81.48) | 60 (88.24) |
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| Black or African American | 8 (2.19) | 8 (2.69) | 0 (0.00) |
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| Asian/Pacific Islander | 27 (7.40) | 22 (7.41) | 5 (7.35) |
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| Native American or American Indian | 2 (0.55) | 1 (0.34) | 1 (1.47) |
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| More than one race | 21 (5.75) | 19 (6.40) | 2 (2.94) |
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| Unknown/not reported | 5 (1.37) | 5 (1.68) | 0 (0.00) |
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| .69e | |||||||||
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| Hispanic or Latino | 12 (3.29) | 9 (3.03) | 3 (4.41) |
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| Not Hispanic or Latino | 343 (93.97) | 279 (93.94) | 64 (94.12) |
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| Unknown/not reported | 10 (2.74) | 9 (3.03) | 1 (1.47) |
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| .39e | |||||||||
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| Registered nurse | 325 (89.04) | 264 (88.88) | 61 (89.71) |
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| Medical doctor | 5 (1.37) | 5 (1.68) | 0 (0.00) |
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| Medical assistant | 10 (2.74) | 7 (2.36) | 3 (4.41) |
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| Emergency medical services | 2 (0.55) | 1 (0.34) | 1 (1.47) |
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| Otherf | 23 (10.96) | 20 (6.73) | 3 (4.41) |
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aRetained includes completing follow-up of 4 months or by study end cutoff date.
bDNF: did not finish.
cDNF includes participants lost to follow-up, dropped out, or withdrawn.
dPearson chi-square tests.
eFishers exact tests.
fOther occupations include social workers, respiratory therapist, surg/cardio tech, dentist, registered dietitian, or medical student.
Figure 2Survival probability of retaining in the study. Additional data from Pratap et al [6]. Kaplan-Meir survival curves for the Stress and Recovery study and for 8 additional digital health app-based studies as described in Pratap et al [6]. Please interpret with caution. The survival probabilities from the 8 studies included in Pratap et al [6] included a mix of different study populations some including chronic disease populations and some healthy populations with different study durations.
Adherence rates by study activity.
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| Full study period |
| Study app surveys, n | 286a |
| Daily surveyb, % | 69.18 |
| Weekly surveys, % | 68.37 |
| Biweekly surveys, % | 72.86 |
| Monthly surveys, % | 68.82 |
| ResearchKit tasks, nc | 164 |
| Cognitive active tasks, % | 80.59 |
| Cambridge cognition, nd | 289 |
| Cognition tasks, % | 56.49 |
| ESe check-ins, n | 297 |
| Biweekly check-insf, % | 75.62 |
| Oura Smart Ring, ng | 296 |
| Oura Ring use, % | 90.60 |
| On-shift wearable subarm, n | 95 |
| Garmin Smartwatch use, % | 90.42 |
aExcluding 11 participants who were Android users and unable to use the study app.
bAll study app survey completion calculations exclude 12 participants (11 retained) with Android sensors who have no study app data
cResearchKit active tasks were switched to Cambridge Cognition tasks on July 6, 2020; therefore, some participants did not receive at least 1 ResearchKit tasks as reflected by a smaller study sample size
dThe higher sample size reflects a few Android users who were able to access the web-based Cambridge Cognition links.
eES: engagement specialist.
fOf the 297 retained participants, 2 completed 0 check-ins.
gOne retained participant never synced their ring to the app.
Figure 3Weekly average adherence and standard errors for daily app-based tasks (A) and Oura Ring use (B) in retained participants (n=297).