scholarly journals Correction: Using an Electronic App to Promote Home-Based Self-Care in Older Patients With Heart Failure: Qualitative Study on Patient and Informal Caregiver Challenges (Preprint)

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sahr Wali ◽  
Karim Keshavjee ◽  
Linda Nguyen ◽  
Lawrence Mbuagbaw ◽  
Catherine Demers

BACKGROUND Heart failure (HF) affects many older individuals in North America, with recurrent hospitalizations despite postdischarge strategies to prevent readmission. Proper HF self-care can potentially lead to better clinical outcomes, yet many older patients find self-care challenging. Mobile health (mHealth) apps can provide support to patients with respect to HF self-care. However, many mHealth apps are not designed to consider potential patient barriers, such as literacy, numeracy, and cognitive impairment, leading to challenges for older patients. We previously demonstrated that a paper-based standardized diuretic decision support tool (SDDST) with daily weights and adjustment of diuretic dose led to improved self-care. Objective: The aim of this study is to better understand the self-care challenges that older patients with HF and their informal care providers (CPs) face on a daily basis, leading to the conversion of the SDDST into a user-centered mHealth app.

JMIR Cardio ◽  
10.2196/15885 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. e15885
Author(s):  
Sahr Wali ◽  
Karim Keshavjee ◽  
Linda Nguyen ◽  
Lawrence Mbuagbaw ◽  
Catherine Demers

Background Heart failure (HF) affects many older individuals in North America, with recurrent hospitalizations despite postdischarge strategies to prevent readmission. Proper HF self-care can potentially lead to better clinical outcomes, yet many older patients find self-care challenging. Mobile health (mHealth) apps can provide support to patients with respect to HF self-care. However, many mHealth apps are not designed to consider potential patient barriers, such as literacy, numeracy, and cognitive impairment, leading to challenges for older patients. We previously demonstrated that a paper-based standardized diuretic decision support tool (SDDST) with daily weights and adjustment of diuretic dose led to improved self-care. Objective The aim of this study is to better understand the self-care challenges that older patients with HF and their informal care providers (CPs) face on a daily basis, leading to the conversion of the SDDST into a user-centered mHealth app. Methods We recruited 14 patients (male: 8/14, 57%) with a confirmed diagnosis of HF, aged ≥60 years, and 7 CPs from the HF clinic and the cardiology ward at the Hamilton General Hospital. Patients were categorized into 3 groups based on the self-care heart failure index: patients with adequate self-care, patients with inadequate self-care without a CP, or patients with inadequate self-care with a CP. We conducted semistructured interviews with patients and their CPs using persona-scenarios. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed for emerging themes using an inductive approach. Results Six themes were identified: usability of technology, communication, app customization, complexity of self-care, usefulness of HF-related information, and long-term use and cost. Many of the challenges patients and CPs reported involved their unfamiliarity with technology and the lack of incentive for its use. However, participants were supportive and more likely to actively use the HF app when informed of the intervention’s inclusion of volunteer and nurse assistance. Conclusions Patients with varying self-care adequacy levels were willing to use an mHealth app if it was simple in its functionality and user interface. To promote the adoption and usability of these tools, patients confirmed the need for researchers to engage with end users before developing an app. Findings from this study can be used to help inform the design of an mHealth app to ensure that it is adapted for the needs of older individuals with HF.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sahr Wali ◽  
Karim Keshavjee ◽  
Linda Nguyen ◽  
Lawrence Mbuagbaw ◽  
Catherine Demers

BACKGROUND Heart failure (HF) affects many older individuals in North America, with recurrent hospitalizations despite postdischarge strategies to prevent readmission. Proper HF self-care can potentially lead to better clinical outcomes, yet many older patients find self-care challenging. Mobile health (mHealth) apps can provide support to patients with respect to HF self-care. However, many mHealth apps are not designed to consider potential patient barriers, such as literacy, numeracy, and cognitive impairment, leading to challenges for older patients. We previously demonstrated that a paper-based standardized diuretic decision support tool (SDDST) with daily weights and adjustment of diuretic dose led to improved self-care. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study is to better understand the self-care challenges that older patients with HF and their informal care providers (CPs) face on a daily basis, leading to the conversion of the SDDST into a user-centered mHealth app. METHODS We recruited 14 patients (male: 8/14, 57%) with a confirmed diagnosis of HF, aged ≥60 years, and 7 CPs from the HF clinic and the cardiology ward at the Hamilton General Hospital. Patients were categorized into 3 groups based on the self-care heart failure index: patients with adequate self-care, patients with inadequate self-care without a CP, or patients with inadequate self-care with a CP. We conducted semistructured interviews with patients and their CPs using persona-scenarios. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed for emerging themes using an inductive approach. RESULTS Six themes were identified: usability of technology, communication, app customization, complexity of self-care, usefulness of HF-related information, and long-term use and cost. Many of the challenges patients and CPs reported involved their unfamiliarity with technology and the lack of incentive for its use. However, participants were supportive and more likely to actively use the HF app when informed of the intervention’s inclusion of volunteer and nurse assistance. CONCLUSIONS Patients with varying self-care adequacy levels were willing to use an mHealth app if it was simple in its functionality and user interface. To promote the adoption and usability of these tools, patients confirmed the need for researchers to engage with end users before developing an app. Findings from this study can be used to help inform the design of an mHealth app to ensure that it is adapted for the needs of older individuals with HF.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lida Anna Apergi ◽  
Margret V Bjarnadottir ◽  
John S Baras ◽  
Bruce L Golden ◽  
Kelley M Anderson ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Heart failure (HF) is associated with high mortality rates and high costs, and self-care is crucial in the management of the condition. Telehealth can promote patients’ self-care while providing frequent feedback to their health care providers about the patient’s compliance and symptoms. A number of technologies have been considered in the literature to facilitate telehealth in patients with HF. An important factor in the adoption of these technologies is their ease of use. Conversational agent technologies using a voice interface can be a good option because they use speech recognition to communicate with patients. OBJECTIVE The aim of this paper is to study the engagement of patients with HF with voice interface technology. In particular, we investigate which patient characteristics are linked to increased technology use. METHODS We used data from two separate HF patient groups that used different telehealth technologies over a 90-day period. Each group used a different type of voice interface; however, the scripts followed by the two technologies were identical. One technology was based on Amazon’s Alexa (Alexa+), and in the other technology, patients used a tablet to interact with a visually animated and voice-enabled avatar (Avatar). Patient engagement was measured as the number of days on which the patients used the technology during the study period. We used multiple linear regression to model engagement with the technology based on patients’ demographic and clinical characteristics and past technology use. RESULTS In both populations, the patients were predominantly male and Black, had an average age of 55 years, and had HF for an average of 7 years. The only patient characteristic that was statistically different (<i>P</i>=.008) between the two populations was the number of medications they took to manage HF, with a mean of 8.7 (SD 4.0) for Alexa+ and 5.8 (SD 3.4) for Avatar patients. The regression model on the combined population shows that older patients used the technology more frequently (an additional 1.19 days of use for each additional year of age; <i>P</i>=.004). The number of medications to manage HF was negatively associated with use (−5.49; <i>P</i>=.005), and Black patients used the technology less frequently than other patients with similar characteristics (−15.96; <i>P</i>=.08). CONCLUSIONS Older patients’ higher engagement with telehealth is consistent with findings from previous studies, confirming the acceptability of technology in this subset of patients with HF. However, we also found that a higher number of HF medications, which may be correlated with a higher disease burden, is negatively associated with telehealth use. Finally, the lower engagement of Black patients highlights the need for further study to identify the reasons behind this lower engagement, including the possible role of social determinants of health, and potentially create technologies that are better tailored for this population. CLINICALTRIAL


Circulation ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (Suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ifeanyi Madujibeya ◽  
Salman Alreshidi ◽  
Adaze Aroh

Background: Mobile Health applications (mHealth apps) have been demonstrated as an effective strategy for improving self-care abilities in patients with heart failure (HF). However, the uptake of the apps by patients remains low. Little is known about the patient’s perspectives on the factors that influence their uptake of the apps. This study explored HF patients’ perspectives on the barriers and motivators to the uptake and utilization of mHealth apps. Method: Semi-structure interviews and demographic questionnaires were used to gather data from patients with HF (N= 43) recruited from an academic medical center. An in-depth analysis of the interviews was conducted using a deductive thematic approach with the help of qualitative software, Atias.ti version 8. Results: Among the participants ( median age = 62 [35-92] years, mean±SD ejection fraction = 37.3±17, 41.9% female, 70% smartphone owners), 90.7% (n =39) had no prior use of mHealth apps for self-care. The majority of the participants with no prior use of mhealth (79.5%, n = 31), including 64.7% (n= 17) of participants aged 65yrs and above, expressed an intention to use the apps for self-care. All the participants (100%) stated that their healthcare providers (HCP) had never recommended the use of mHealth apps for self-care. Other barriers included lack of knowledge of the apps, the perceived financial cost of mHealth apps or smartphones, concern for privacy, and security of personal information, resistance to the change of previous self-care strategies, and perceived technology incompetence. Motivators to the uptake of mHealth included perceived usefulness of mHealth apps, mHealth apps’ ease of use, and the belief that the use of mHealth apps may alleviate perceived threat to health, and availability of technical support. Conclusion: This study suggests that patients with HF are willing to use mHealth apps to improve their self-care abilities. Thus, the effort to improve patients’ perceptions of mHealth apps’ usefulness and HCP recommendation of the apps are warranted to turn patients' “intention to use” to actual apps usage.


Open Heart ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. e000954 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Hovland-Tånneryd ◽  
Michael Melin ◽  
Ewa Hägglund ◽  
Inger Hagerman ◽  
Hans E Persson

ObjectivesA home-based tool for heart failure (HF) patients, was evaluated in a specialist setting as a randomised controlled trial (RCT) and also in a validation cohort in a primary care setting in a clinical controlled trial (CCT). The tool provides education, symptom monitoring and titration of diuretics. The aim of this study was thus to extend validity of the previous RCT findings in order to describe applicability of the tool in clinical practice.MethodsData from both trials were analysed separately, as well as a pooled data set (n=172). Data were analysed with respect to HF related in-hospital days, self-care behaviour and system adherence, during a 6-month intervention. The analysis of in-hospital days for the pooled data was adjusted for baseline differences between the two study cohorts, relating to disease state.ResultsIn the RCT (n=72) the intervention group (IG) consisted of 32 patients and the control group (CG) of 40 patients. The risk ratio (RR) for in-hospital days was RR: 0.72, 95% CI 0.61 to 0.84, p<0.05 in favour of the IG. In the CCT (n=100) both the IG and the CG consisted of 50 patients and the IG had fewer in-hospitals days, comparable to the RCT findings with RR: 0.67; 95% CI 0.45 to 0.99; p<0.05. For the pooled data set made up of 172 patients, the groups were well balanced but with a higher prevalence of hypertension in the CG. The RR relating to in-hospital days for the pooled data set was 0.71; 95% CI 0.61 to 0.82; p<0.05 in favour of the IG. There was a statistically significant improvement in self-care by 27% and the median system adherence was 94%.ConclusionsThese analyses suggest that the evaluated tool might reduce HF related in-hospital days in the general HF population, which adds to the external validity of previous findings.Clinical Trial RegistrationNCT03655496.


2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. S422
Author(s):  
K. Harkness ◽  
E. MacLean ◽  
G. Heckman ◽  
C. Demers ◽  
R. McKelvie

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
D.S Sahlin ◽  
S Gerward

Abstract Background A common heart failure (HF) aetiology is hypertension (HTN), second only to ischemic heart disease and with a prevalence in the HF community of between 62% and 84%, depending on sex and ejection-fraction. Undertreated HTN leads to worse prognosis and resistant HTN is defined as blood pressure (BP) exceeding 140/90 mmHg, in spite of pharmacological treatment. Since one constituent of self-care behaviour is treatment adherence, we wished to study whether patients exposed to a digital intervention shown to improve self-care behaviour, would also display improved BP control. Methods SMART-HF was a randomized controlled trial, recruiting patients from seven centres in Region Skåne in southern Sweden, where patients in the intervention group (IG) were equipped with a digital home-based tool, designed to enhance self-care behaviour for HF-patients and the control group (CG) were subject to standard care. BP data was registered at baseline and after eight months of intervention and self-care behaviour was measured using the European Heart Failure Self-care Behaviour Scale (EHFScB). We used a Chi-square test to analyse whether there was an inter-group difference of prevalence of resistant HTN or a mean arterial pressure (MAP) outside the recommended range of 60 mmHg &lt; MAP &lt;100 mmHg. Results Out of the 118 patients included in the original analysis, 92 (78%) had complete BP measurements. At baseline there was no difference in self-care behaviour between the groups, with CG: 25 [17.5; 32] and IG: 24.5 [18; 30], p=0.61, and 28% of the CG patients and 24% of the IG population displayed resistant HTN, p=0.73. After eight months of intervention the IG had 21% (or 4.5 points) better self-care behaviour compared to the CG, p=0.014, and the fraction of patients with resistant HTN was 30% for the CG and 11% for the IG, p=0.027. There was also a significant effect on the fraction of patients having a MAP &gt;100 mmHg, with 22% in the CG versus 16% in the IG having MAP &gt;100 mmHg at baseline (p=0.39) and 19% in the CG versus 0% in the IG at follow-up (p=0.002). Conclusions There was a significant improvement in self-care behaviour and also a significant reduction in the number of patients with resistant hypertension and elevated mean arterial pressure after eight months of intervention. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None


2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heng-Hsin Tung ◽  
Jeng Wei ◽  
Liang-Kung Chen ◽  
Jen-Chen Tsai ◽  
Kuan-Chia Lin ◽  
...  

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