| Literature DB >> 35921145 |
Steven van de Vijver1,2, Deirdre Hummel3, Annericht Hester van Dijk3, Jan Cox4, Oscar van Dijk4, Nicoline Van den Broek5, Esther Metting3,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Population aging and multimorbidity has led to increasing chronic care needs associated with new challenges in managing growing costs, rising health care professional workloads, and the adoption of rigorous guidelines. These issues could all benefit from greater digitalization and a more patient-centered approach to chronic care, a situation brought to the fore by the COVID-19 pandemic. Little is known about real-life use in primary care.Entities:
Keywords: chronic care; chronic care management; chronic disease; communication; digital health; empowerment; healthcare; healthcare professional; illness; online; patient; patient-centered care; platform; primary care; self-management; telemonitoring; tool; user
Year: 2022 PMID: 35921145 PMCID: PMC9386583 DOI: 10.2196/38424
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Form Res ISSN: 2561-326X
Study design.
| Element | Sample, n | Participants and methods | Aim |
| 1 | 20 | Patients in the practice who do not use the platform questionnaire | Evaluation of views on digitalization of care and intention to use the new platform |
| 2 | 61 partly 58 | Patients who use the platform questionnaires (IPQ-Ka for illness perception, SF-12b for quality of life, and SUSc for usability) | Evaluation of their experiences with the platform and their thoughts toward illness and quality of life |
| 3 | 19 | Semistructured interviews with patients (n=15) and general practitioners (n=4) who used the platform | Evaluation of their experiences with the platform |
aIPQ-K: Illness Perception Questionnaire–Short.
bSF-12: Short Form Survey–12 Item.
cSUS: System Usability Scale.
Figure 1Results of Illness Perception Questionnaire–Short.
Figure 2Short Form Survey–12 Item: summary of responses for health-related quality of life among platform users.
Figure 3System Usability Scale: summary of responses among platform users.
Overview of topics and themes concerning the platform, as identified by questionnaire and interview.
| Interview topics and themes | Examples | |
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| Factors that may influence use | Viewpoint of GPa |
| Recommendation to other patients | Not hypochondriac and must be digitally literate | |
| Recommendations for the platform | Personal health environment and need to expand before it is efficient | |
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| Use of other features | Interest in other features (eg, scale, Fitbit, and glucose meter) |
| Learning process for using the platform | Learning how to use the platform | |
| User friendliness | Easy interface | |
| Satisfaction measuring tool | Three easy-to-use measurements | |
| Continued use of the platform | Intent to continue using the platform | |
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| Time and task efficient | Workload reductions |
| Increased quality | More insight and involvement | |
| Increased accessibility | Lower threshold for consultation | |
| Self-management | More autonomy and empowerment | |
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| Fixed time | Felt rigid and strict |
| Technical questions | Difficulty using Bluetooth | |
| Lack of communication | Sometimes a bit impersonal | |
| Lack of feedback | Difficult to be motivated without a reaction | |
aGP: general practitioner.
Recommendations to facilitate implementation and remove barriers.
| Recommendation | Example |
| Ensure that there is sufficient information about the digital platform, its use, and the goals. | A manual or introductory video can help. |
| Be clear about what information the health care provider can view and when contact will occur. | Create standardized messages and discuss uncertainties before starting. |
| Avoid fixed measurement times. | This could be resolved by giving patients control over when to take measurements. |
| Make the platform adaptable to the users. | Certain functions could be added or removed from the user’s personalized online environment. |
| Ensure balance between digital and in-person consultations to ensure that the platform is not experienced as impersonal. | Try to provide consultations at regular levels, either in person, by phone, or via the app, depending on the patient. |
| Start using the platform with patients who are less digitally and health literate to ensure that the whole population can benefit from the tool. | The population currently using the tool is clearly interested and equipped to work with such tools, but we must ensure applicability to all groups with additional research. |