Developing and Implementing an mHealth Heart Failure Self-care Program to Reduce Readmissions: Randomized Controlled Trial.

Q2 Medicine JMIR Cardio Pub Date : 2022-03-21 DOI:10.2196/33286
Amber E Johnson, Shuvodra Routh, Christy N Taylor, Meagan Leopold, Kathryn Beatty, Dennis M McNamara, Esa M Davis
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Background: Patients admitted with decompensated heart failure (HF) are at risk for hospital readmission and poor quality of life during the discharge period. Lifestyle behavior modifications that promote the self-management of chronic cardiac diseases have been associated with an improved quality of life. However, whether a mobile health (mHealth) program can assist patients in the self-management of HF during the acute posthospital discharge period is unknown.

Objective: We aimed to develop an mHealth program designed to enhance patients' self-management of HF by increasing knowledge, self-efficacy, and symptom detection. We hypothesized that patients hospitalized with HF would be willing to use a feasibly deployed mHealth program after their hospital discharge.

Methods: We employed a patient-centered outcomes research methodology to design a stakeholder-informed mHealth program. Adult patients with HF admitted to a large academic hospital were enrolled and randomized to receive the mHealth intervention versus usual care. Our feasibility outcomes included ease of program deployment, use of the clinical escalation process, duration of participant recruitment, and participant attrition. Surveys assessing the demographics and clinical characteristics of HF were measured at baseline and at 30 and 90 days after discharge.

Results: The study period was between July 1, 2019, and April 7, 2020. The mean cohort (N=31) age was 60.4 (range 22-85) years. Over half of the participants were men (n=18, 58%) and 77% (n=24) were White. There were no significant differences in baseline measures. We determined that an educational mHealth program tailored for patients with HF is feasibly deployed and acceptable by patients. Though not significant, we found notable trends including a higher mean quality of life at 30 days posthospitalization among program users and a longer duration before rehospitalization, which are suggestive of better HF prognosis.

Conclusions: Our mHealth tool should be further assessed in a larger comparative effectiveness trial. Our pilot intervention offers promise as an innovative means to help HF patients lead healthy, independent lives. These preliminary data suggest that patient-centered mHealth tools can enable high-risk patients to play a role in the management of their HF after discharge.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03982017; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03982017.

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开发和实施移动医疗心力衰竭自我护理计划以减少再入院:随机对照试验。
背景:失代偿性心力衰竭(HF)患者在出院期间有再次住院和生活质量差的风险。生活方式行为的改变促进慢性心脏病的自我管理与生活质量的提高有关。然而,移动医疗(mHealth)项目是否能帮助患者在急性出院后对心衰进行自我管理尚不清楚。目的:我们旨在开发一个移动健康项目,旨在通过增加心衰患者的知识、自我效能和症状检测来增强心衰患者的自我管理。我们假设心力衰竭住院的患者在出院后会愿意使用一个可行的移动健康计划。方法:我们采用以患者为中心的结果研究方法来设计一个利益相关者知情的移动健康项目。我们招募了一家大型学术医院收治的成年心衰患者,随机分组接受移动医疗干预与常规护理。我们的可行性结果包括项目部署的便利性、临床升级过程的使用、参与者招募的持续时间和参与者的流失。在基线和出院后30天和90天测量评估心衰的人口统计学和临床特征的调查。结果:研究时间为2019年7月1日至2020年4月7日。平均队列(N=31)年龄为60.4岁(22-85岁)。超过一半的参与者是男性(n=18, 58%), 77% (n=24)是白人。基线测量无显著差异。我们确定为心衰患者量身定制的教育移动健康计划是可行的,并且可以被患者接受。虽然不显著,但我们发现了显著的趋势,包括计划使用者在出院后30天的平均生活质量较高,再住院前的时间较长,这表明心衰预后较好。结论:我们的移动医疗工具应该在更大的比较有效性试验中进一步评估。我们的试点干预为帮助心衰患者过上健康、独立的生活提供了一种创新手段。这些初步数据表明,以患者为中心的移动健康工具可以使高危患者在出院后的心衰管理中发挥作用。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03982017;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03982017。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JMIR Cardio
JMIR Cardio Computer Science-Computer Science Applications
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊最新文献
Comparison of Auscultation Quality Using Contemporary Digital Stethoscopes. The Development of Heart Failure Electronic-Message Driven Tips to Support Self-Management: Co-Design Case Study. Identifying the Severity of Heart Valve Stenosis and Regurgitation Among a Diverse Population Within an Integrated Health Care System: Natural Language Processing Approach. Smart Device Ownership and Use of Social Media, Wearable Trackers, and Health Apps Among Black Women With Hypertension in the United States: National Survey Study. A co-design case study of the development of heart failure e-TIPS to support self-management.
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