Implementing Mobile Health-Enabled Integrated Care for Complex Chronic Patients: Patients and Professionals' Acceptability Study.
chronic diseases
eHealth
health plan implementation
mHealth
patient acceptance of health care
patient satisfaction
Journal
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
ISSN: 2291-5222
Titre abrégé: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth
Pays: Canada
ID NLM: 101624439
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
20 11 2020
20 11 2020
Historique:
received:
04
07
2020
accepted:
12
09
2020
revised:
31
08
2020
entrez:
20
11
2020
pubmed:
21
11
2020
medline:
16
4
2021
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Integrated care (IC) can promote health and social care efficiency through prioritization of preventive patient-centered models and defragmentation of care and collaboration across health tiers, and mobile health (mHealth) can be the cornerstone allowing for the adoption of IC. This study aims to assess the acceptability, usability, and satisfaction of an mHealth-enabled IC model for complex chronic patients in both patients and health professionals. As part of the CONNECARE Horizon 2020 project, a prospective, pragmatic, 2-arm, parallel, hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial was conducted from July 2018 to August 2019 in a rural region of Catalonia, Spain. Home-dwelling patients 55 years and older with chronic conditions and a history of hospitalizations for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or heart failure (use case [UC] 1), or a scheduled major elective hip or knee arthroplasty (UC2) were recruited. During the 3 months, patients experienced an mHealth-enabled IC model, including a self-management app for patients, a set of integrated sensors, and a web-based platform connecting professionals from different settings or usual care. The Person-Centered Coordinated Care Experience Questionnaire (P3CEQ) and the Nijmegen Continuity Questionnaire (NCQ) assessed person-centeredness and continuity of care. Acceptability was assessed for IC arm patients and staff with the Net Promoter Score (NPS) and the System Usability Scale (SUS). The analyses included 77 IC patients, 58 controls who completed the follow-up, and 30 health care professionals. The mean age was 78 (SD 9) years in both study arms. Perception of patient-centeredness was similarly high in both arms (usual care: mean P3CEQ score 16.1, SD 3.3; IC: mean P3CEQ score 16.3, SD 2.4). IC patients reported better continuity of care than controls (usual care: mean NCQ score 3.7, SD 0.9; IC: mean NCQ score 4.0, SD 1; P=.04). The scores for patient acceptability (UC1: NPS +67%; UC2: NPS +45%) and usability (UC1: mean SUS score 79, SD 14; UC2: mean SUS score 68, SD 24) were outstanding. Professionals' acceptability was low (UC1: NPS -25%; UC2: NPS -35%), whereas usability was average (UC1: mean SUS score 63, SD 20; UC2: mean SUS score 62, SD 19). The actual use of technology was high; 77% (58/75) of patients reported physical activity for at least 60 days, and the ratio of times reported over times prescribed for other sensors ranged from 37% for oxygen saturation to 67% for weight. The mHealth-enabled IC model showed outstanding results from the patients' perspective in 2 different UCs but lacked maturity and integration with legacy systems to be fully accepted by professionals. This paper provides useful lessons learned through the development and assessment process and may be of use to organizations willing to develop or implement mHealth-enabled IC for older adults.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
Integrated care (IC) can promote health and social care efficiency through prioritization of preventive patient-centered models and defragmentation of care and collaboration across health tiers, and mobile health (mHealth) can be the cornerstone allowing for the adoption of IC.
OBJECTIVE
This study aims to assess the acceptability, usability, and satisfaction of an mHealth-enabled IC model for complex chronic patients in both patients and health professionals.
METHODS
As part of the CONNECARE Horizon 2020 project, a prospective, pragmatic, 2-arm, parallel, hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial was conducted from July 2018 to August 2019 in a rural region of Catalonia, Spain. Home-dwelling patients 55 years and older with chronic conditions and a history of hospitalizations for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or heart failure (use case [UC] 1), or a scheduled major elective hip or knee arthroplasty (UC2) were recruited. During the 3 months, patients experienced an mHealth-enabled IC model, including a self-management app for patients, a set of integrated sensors, and a web-based platform connecting professionals from different settings or usual care. The Person-Centered Coordinated Care Experience Questionnaire (P3CEQ) and the Nijmegen Continuity Questionnaire (NCQ) assessed person-centeredness and continuity of care. Acceptability was assessed for IC arm patients and staff with the Net Promoter Score (NPS) and the System Usability Scale (SUS).
RESULTS
The analyses included 77 IC patients, 58 controls who completed the follow-up, and 30 health care professionals. The mean age was 78 (SD 9) years in both study arms. Perception of patient-centeredness was similarly high in both arms (usual care: mean P3CEQ score 16.1, SD 3.3; IC: mean P3CEQ score 16.3, SD 2.4). IC patients reported better continuity of care than controls (usual care: mean NCQ score 3.7, SD 0.9; IC: mean NCQ score 4.0, SD 1; P=.04). The scores for patient acceptability (UC1: NPS +67%; UC2: NPS +45%) and usability (UC1: mean SUS score 79, SD 14; UC2: mean SUS score 68, SD 24) were outstanding. Professionals' acceptability was low (UC1: NPS -25%; UC2: NPS -35%), whereas usability was average (UC1: mean SUS score 63, SD 20; UC2: mean SUS score 62, SD 19). The actual use of technology was high; 77% (58/75) of patients reported physical activity for at least 60 days, and the ratio of times reported over times prescribed for other sensors ranged from 37% for oxygen saturation to 67% for weight.
CONCLUSIONS
The mHealth-enabled IC model showed outstanding results from the patients' perspective in 2 different UCs but lacked maturity and integration with legacy systems to be fully accepted by professionals. This paper provides useful lessons learned through the development and assessment process and may be of use to organizations willing to develop or implement mHealth-enabled IC for older adults.
Identifiants
pubmed: 33216004
pii: v8i11e22136
doi: 10.2196/22136
pmc: PMC7718089
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
e22136Investigateurs
Maria Aguilà Balastegui
(M)
Sandra Alexandre Loxano
(S)
Laila Al-Jouja Llorente
(L)
Tomás Alonso Sancho
(T)
Enrique Aparicio Bañeres
(E)
Ana Arce Vila
(A)
Jose Maria Baron Burriel
(JM)
Ramon Bascompte Claret
(R)
Albert Bigorda Sague
(A)
Emilia Blanco Ponce
(E)
Maria Boldú Franque
(M)
Àngels Bosch Roig
(À)
Carmen Bravo Santiago
(C)
Alba Capdevila Sarramona
(A)
Aida Castelló Corretge
(A)
Montse Coma Gassó
(M)
Fina Cregenzan Ortiz
(F)
Dolors Del Pozo Garcia
(D)
Mireia Falguera Vilamajó
(M)
Pere Farre Pagés
(P)
Yolanda Fauria Garcia
(Y)
Anabel Fusalba Canales
(A)
Jara Gayan Ordas
(J)
Sergi Godia Lopez
(S)
Irene Gomez Companys
(I)
Jessica Gonzàlez Gutierrez
(J)
Anna Gort Oromí
(A)
Carme Jorge Tufet
(C)
Mercé Lavega Llorens
(M)
Laia Llort Samsó
(L)
Maria Rosa Lopez Cervelló
(MR)
Belen Malla Clua
(B)
Josep Maria Marsol Mas
(JM)
Teresita Martí Ribes
(T)
Diana Martin Capella
(D)
José Maria Martínez Barriuso
(JM)
Esther Mateus Solé
(E)
Ramon Mazana Novellon
(R)
Petra Merino De los Santos
(P)
Miquel Mesas Julio
(M)
Sonia Minguet Vidal
(S)
Nuria Moles Porta
(N)
Luis Miguel Montaña Esteban
(LM)
Dolors Morera Roset
(D)
Meritxell Moyà Oro
(M)
Irene Muñoz Del Campo
(I)
Francisco Nicolás Sánchez
(F)
Inés Ortiz Catalán
(I)
Mireia Ortiz Valls
(M)
Sonia Ortiz Congost
(S)
Jose Maria Palacin Peruga
(JM)
Eugeni Paredes Costa
(E)
Pablo Pastor Pueyo
(P)
Ana Pérez Sainz
(A)
Antonio Plana Blanco
(A)
Anna Planas Hiraldo
(A)
Pepita Pont Aldoma
(P)
Marife Quelle Alonso
(M)
Rebeca Ramirez Molinero
(R)
Maria Àngels Revés Juanbaro
(MÀ)
Anna Ribé Miró
(A)
Eva Ribó Caubet
(E)
Rebeca Rodriguez Corbaton
(R)
Marina Rué Florensa
(M)
Oscar Sacristán García
(O)
Irene Sanmartí Forns
(I)
Maria Cruz Sanz Martinez
(MC)
Neus Sendra Bordes
(N)
Maria Cruz Urgelés Castillón
(MC)
Laia Utrillo Montagut
(L)
Montse Vidal Ballesté
(M)
Informations de copyright
©Jordi de Batlle, Mireia Massip, Eloisa Vargiu, Nuria Nadal, Araceli Fuentes, Marta Ortega Bravo, Jordi Colomina, Reis Drudis, Montserrat Torra, Francesc Pallisó, Felip Miralles, Ferran Barbé, Gerard Torres, CONNECARE-Lleida Group. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (http://mhealth.jmir.org), 20.11.2020.
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