| Literature DB >> 35522471 |
Jacob A Rohde1, Edwin B Fisher2, Marcella H Boynton3, Deen Freelon1, Dennis O Frohlich4, Edward L Barnes5, Seth M Noar1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile health technologies can be useful for providing disease self-management information and support to people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).Entities:
Keywords: SMS text messaging; inflammatory bowel disease; mHealth; mobile phone; self-management
Year: 2022 PMID: 35522471 PMCID: PMC9123538 DOI: 10.2196/34960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Form Res ISSN: 2561-326X
Figure 1Flow diagram of participant recruitment, enrollment, and retention.
Figure 2SMS text messaging schedule for the Text4IBD program. IBD: inflammatory bowel disease.
Figure 3Example SMS text messages sent by the Text4IBD program. IBD: inflammatory bowel disease.
Demographic and IBDa characteristics of the study sample obtained from the pretest survey (N=114).
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| Values | |||
| Age (years), mean (SD; range) | 29.11 (7.28; 19-53) | |||
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| Female | 68 (59.6) | ||
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| Male | 36 (31.6) | ||
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| Other or prefer not to say | 10 (8.8) | ||
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| White | 95 (83.3) | ||
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| Black or African American | 2 (1.8) | ||
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| Asian | 2 (1.8) | ||
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| Other or multiracial | 15 (13.2) | ||
| Hispanic, n (%) | 10 (8.8) | |||
| Gay, lesbian, or bisexual, n (%) | 44 (38.6) | |||
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| High school or less | 12 (10.5) | ||
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| Some college or associate degree | 50 (43.9) | ||
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| Bachelor’s degree | 40 (35.1) | ||
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| Graduate or professional degree | 12 (10.5) | ||
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| 0-29,999 | 30 (26.3) | ||
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| 30,000-49,999 | 23 (20.2) | ||
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| 50,000-79,999 | 24 (21.1) | ||
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| 80,000-99,999 | 16 (14) | ||
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| ≥100,000 | 19 (16.7) | ||
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| No response | 2 (1.8) | ||
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| Crohn disease | 83 (72.8) | ||
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| Ulcerative colitis | 22 (19.3) | ||
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| Other | 9 (7.9) | ||
| Age at diagnosis (years), mean (SD) | 22.32 (8.32) | |||
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| 6.80 (6.44) | |||
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| ≤1, n (%) | 31 (27.2) | ||
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| 2-5, n (%) | 28 (24.6) | ||
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| >5, n (%) | 55 (48.2) | ||
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| 4.68 (1.28) | |||
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| Remission, n (%) | 36 (31.6) | ||
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| Rarely active, n (%) | 34 (29.8) | ||
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| Occasionally active, n (%) | 27 (23.7) | ||
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| Sometimes active, n (%) | 8 (7) | ||
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| Often active, n (%) | 6 (5.3) | ||
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| Constantly active, n (%) | 3 (2.6) | ||
| Complete medication adherencec (n=73), n (%) | 41 (56) | |||
aIBD: inflammatory bowel disease.
bIBD activity based on the Manitoba IBD Index, where high values indicate worse disease activity.
cAssessed only among those who reported taking daily oral IBD medication in the pretest survey.
Text4IBD feasibility, acceptability, and engagement (n=105).
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| Values | |
| Easy to participate, n (%) | 101 (96.2) | |
| Would participate again, n (%) | 98 (93.3) | |
| Would recommend to others with IBD,a n (%) | 99 (94.3) | |
| Message frequency approximately right, n (%) | 90 (85.7) | |
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| All of them | 76 (72.4) |
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| A lot | 20 (19) |
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| Some | 8 (7.6) |
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| Very few | 1 (0.9) |
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| 8.03 (2.04) | |
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| Helpful | 7.88 (2.29) |
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| Informative | 7.99 (2.24) |
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| Supportive | 8.33 (2.05) |
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| Useful | 7.91 (2.34) |
| Medication reminder was useful,b mean (SD) | 3.37 (1.39) | |
| Satisfied with message content, mean (SD) | 3.81 (1) | |
| Satisfied with message resources,c mean (SD) | 3.64 (0.98) | |
| Used at least one message resource, n (%) | 83 (79) | |
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| MyGut | 45 (42.9) |
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| IBD nutrition and what to eat | 45 (42.9) |
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| Coping strategies to improve mental health | 41 (39) |
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| Special IBD diets | 39 (37.1) |
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| COVID-19 and mental health | 38 (36.2) |
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| Web-based IBD community | 32 (30.5) |
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| IBD expert questions and answers | 24 (22.9) |
aIBD: inflammatory bowel disease.
bAssessed only among those who reported taking daily oral IBD medication in the posttest survey (n=65).
cAssessed only among those who reported accessing at least one message resource (n=83).
dVariables are not mutually exclusive.
Figure 4Aided topic recall of the Text4IBD messages. IBD: inflammatory bowel disease; IBS: irritable bowel syndrome.
Pretest-posttest differences among study outcomes (n=105).a
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| Pretest assessment | Posttest assessment | Cohen | ||
| IBDb-related distress, mean (SD) | 3.33 (0.68) | 2.86 (0.73) | <.001 | 0.77 | |
| Perceived IBD support, mean (SD) | 2.89 (0.92) | 3.26 (0.93) | <.001 | 0.47 | |
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| Remission management | 4.94 (1.94) | 6.39 (1.97) | <.001 | 0.75 |
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| Stress and emotions management | 5.19 (1.85) | 6.45 (1.76) | <.001 | 0.69 |
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| Symptoms management | 4.21 (1.96) | 5.53 (2.09) | <.001 | 0.58 |
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| Medication managementc | 9.32 (2.23) | 9.66 (1.64) | .49 | 0.09 |
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| Use of relaxation techniques | 2.63 (1.12) | 2.93 (1.07) | .009 | 0.26 |
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| Think positively about IBD | 2.47 (1.24) | 2.69 (1.14) | .03 | 0.21 |
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| Alter diet to improve IBD | 3.44 (1.26) | 3.18 (1.09) | .02 | –0.22 |
| Complete medication adherencec (n=61), n (%) | 36 (59) | 40 (65.6) | .45 | N/Ad | |
aMeasures were assessed on 5-point scales, except self-efficacy subscales (11-point scales) and complete medication adherence (dichotomous outcome); low values in the posttest survey for IBD-related distress indicate better outcome, whereas high values in the posttest survey for perceived IBD support, self-efficacy subscales, coping strategies, and complete medication adherence indicate a better outcome. We also ran the analyses controlling for age, gender, education level, type of IBD, time since IBD diagnosis, and disease activity and did not find any differences in the pattern of effects. Thus, we present the findings without adjustment.
bIBD: inflammatory bowel disease.
cAssessed only among those who reported taking daily oral IBD medication both in the pretest and posttest surveys.
dN/A: not applicable.