feasibility testing
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Author(s):  
Yakir S. Levin ◽  
Rahib Islam ◽  
Mathew M. Avram ◽  
Walfre Franco ◽  
R. Rox Anderson
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Akbar Permana Putra ◽  
Priyanto Priyanto

The objective of the present study is to produce a learning media product of health protocol implementation to children entitled "Awas Ada Virus Corona". This media utilized R&D method and took several steps, namely preliminary research and data collection, research planning, product development, expert validation, product revision and final product. Feasibility testing is carried out by media experts by examining the multimedia construction domain consist of 3 aspects, namely guidance and information, program performance as well as systematic, aesthetic, and design aspects. Furthermore, a filled questionnaire by media experts was used to collect the data needed. Meanwhile, the descriptive statistic was used to analyzed the data gathered. The result of the present study is an application that can be used by children entitled " Awas Ada Virus Corona " as an educational media in implementing 3M of health protocol, namely wearing masks, washing hands, and maintaining a safe distance. The addition of Augmented reality technology with a live coloring feature is added in this application in reading markers to increase children's attractiveness. This augmented reality technology is applied in order to avoid the children only focus on gadgets, so children feel happy in using the familiar media and still interacting with the environment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chidozie Emmanuel Mbada ◽  
Tobiloba Samuel Isatayo ◽  
John Oluwatosin Omole ◽  
Adesola Christiana Odole ◽  
Olusola Ayanniyi ◽  
...  

Objectives: Use of animated cartoon for pain management is an emerging area, however, no study have explored it as a digital platform for rehabilitation of low-back pain (LBP). This study was aimed to develop and evaluate the feasibility of an animated cartoon-based self-care (ACBSC) app for LBP, and to examine the correlation between the app rating parameters and patients’ pain. Methods: This two-phase study comprised a development and feasibility testing components. Development of the ACBSC app was based on Mckenzie’s Mechanical Diagnosis and Therapy (MDT) extension protocolplus back hygiene following standard iteration and prototyping process. Twenty-eight consecutive patients with chronic non-specific LBP with 'direction Preference’ for extension based on the MDT screening algorithm participated in the feasibility phase. The participants utilized the cartoon-based app thrice weekly for two weeks. Outcomes were assessed in terms of usability, satisfaction and user’s experience using the system usability scale and mobile application rating scale. Quadruple visual analogue scale was used to assess pain intensity of the participants. Results: On a unified scale of 20, functionality (15.4 ± 2.41) and aesthetics 14 ± 2.00 had highest and least objective quality rating on the app parameters. Total objective and subjective quality rating of the app was 16.9 ± 1.97 and 15.6 ± 2.42 respectively. Total impact and usability score was 24.1 ± 3.39 (out of 30) and 27.8 ± 3.09 (out of 50). Participants reported that back care cartoon app mostly affect mindfulness/meditation/relaxation (42.9%), increases happiness/well-being (46.4%), leads to behavioural change (60.7%) and targets physical health (100%). There was no significant correlation between participants’ pain characteristics and app rating parameters (p>0.05). Conclusion: The animated cartoon-based self-care LBP app has moderate to high usability, functionality, aesthetics and quality rating, and may serve as an effective mobile-app for self-management of long-term LBP.


2021 ◽  
Vol 170 ◽  
pp. 112517
Author(s):  
S. Jimenez ◽  
D. Bookless ◽  
R. Nath ◽  
W.J. Leong ◽  
J. Kotaniemi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian P Subbe ◽  
Hawys Tomos ◽  
Gwenlli Mai Jones ◽  
Paul Barach

Abstract Background Patient participation is increasingly recognized as a key component in the redesign of healthcare processes and is advocated as a means to improve patient safety. Objective To explore the usage of participatory engagement in patient-created and co-designed medical records for emergency admission to the hospital. Methods design: prospective iterative development and feasibility testing of personal health records; setting: an acute medical unit in a university-affiliated hospital; participants: patients admitted to hospital for medical emergencies; interventions: we used a design-led development of personal health record prototypes and feasibility testing of records completed by patients during the process of emergency admission. ‘Express-check-in’ records contained items of social history, screening questions for sepsis and acute kidney injury in addition to the patients’ ideas, concerns and expectations; main outcome measures: the outcome metrics focused on feasibility and a selection of quality domains, namely effectiveness of recording relevant history, time efficiency of the documentation process, patient-centredness of resulting records and staff and patient feedback. The incidence of sepsis and acute kidney injury were used as surrogate measures for assessing the safety impact. Results The medical record prototypes were developed in an iterative fashion and tested with 100 patients, in which 39 patients were 70 or older and 25 patients were classified as clinically frail. Ninety-six per cent of the data items were completed by patients with no or minimal help from healthcare professionals. The completeness of these patient records was superior to that of the corresponding medical records in that they contained deeply held beliefs and fears, whereas concerns and expectations recorded by patients were only mirrored in a small proportion of the formal clinical records. The sepsis self-screening tool identified 68% of patients requiring treatment with antibiotics. The intervention was feasible, independent of the level of formal education and effective in frail and elderly patients with support from family and staff. The prototyped records were well received and felt to be practical by patients and staff. The staff indicated that reading the patients’ documentation led to significant changes in their clinical management. Conclusions Medical record accessibility to patients during hospital care contributes to the co-management of personal healthcare and might add critical information over and above the records compiled by healthcare professionals.


Trials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanna M. Nemis-White ◽  
Laura M. Hamilton ◽  
Sarah Shaw ◽  
James H. MacKillop ◽  
Ratika Parkash ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Integrated Management Program Advancing Community Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation (IMPACT-AF) was a pragmatic, cluster randomized trial assessing the effectiveness of a clinical decision support (CDS) tool in primary care, Nova Scotia, Canada. We evaluated if CDS software versus Usual Care could help primary care providers (PCPs) deliver individualized guideline-based AF patient care. Methods Key study challenges including CDS development and implementation, recruitment, and data integration documented over the trial duration are presented as lessons learned. Results Adequate resources must be allocated for software development, updates and feasibility testing. Development took longer than projected. End-user feedback suggested network access and broadband speeds impeded uptake; they felt further that the CDS was not sufficiently user-friendly or efficient in supporting AF care (i.e., repetitive alerts). Integration across e-platforms is crucial. Intellectual property and other issues prohibited CDS integration within electronic medical records and provincial e-health platforms. Double login and data entry were impediments to participation or reasons for provider withdrawal. Data integration challenges prevented easy and timely data access, analysis, and reporting. Primary care study recruitment is resource intensive. Altogether, 203 PCPs and 1145 of their patients participated, representing 25% of eligible providers and 12% of AF patients in Nova Scotia, respectively. The most effective provider recruitment strategy was in-office, small group lunch-and-learns. PCPs with past research experience or who led patient consent were top recruiters. The study office played a pivotal role in achieving patient recruitment targets. Conclusions A rapid growth in healthcare data is leading to widespread development of CDS. Our experience found practical issues to address for such applications to succeed. Feasibility testing to assess the utility of any healthcare CDS prior to implementation is recommended. Adequate resources are necessary to support successful recruitment for future pragmatic trials. CDS tools that integrate multiple co-morbid guidelines across eHealth platforms should be pursued. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01927367. Registered on August 22, 2013


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