Anxiety, patient activation, and quality of life among stroke survivors prescribed smartwatches for atrial fibrillation monitoring

IF 2.6 Q2 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Tenes J. Paul DO , Khanh-Van Tran MD, PhD , Jordy Mehawej MD, ScM , Darleen Lessard MS , Eric Ding MS , Andreas Filippaios MD , Sakeina Howard-Wilson DO , Edith Mensah Otabil BA , Kamran Noorishirazi BA , Syed Naeem MD , Alex Hamel BA , Dong Han BS , Ki H. Chon PhD , Bruce Barton PhD , Jane Saczynski PhD , David McManus MD, ScM (FHRS)
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

The detection of atrial fibrillation (AF) in stroke survivors is critical to decreasing the risk of recurrent stroke. Smartwatches have emerged as a convenient and accurate means of AF diagnosis; however, the impact on critical patient-reported outcomes, including anxiety, engagement, and quality of life, remains ill defined.

Objectives

To examine the association between smartwatch prescription for AF detection and the patient-reported outcomes of anxiety, patient activation, and self-reported health.

Methods

We used data from the Pulsewatch trial, a 2-phase randomized controlled trial that included participants aged 50 years or older with a history of ischemic stroke. Participants were randomized to use either a proprietary smartphone-smartwatch app for 30 days of AF monitoring or no cardiac rhythm monitoring. Validated surveys were deployed before and after the 30-day study period to assess anxiety, patient activation, and self-rated physical and mental health. Logistic regression and generalized estimation equations were used to examine the association between smartwatch prescription for AF monitoring and changes in the patient-reported outcomes.

Results

A total of 110 participants (mean age 64 years, 41% female, 91% non-Hispanic White) were studied. Seventy percent of intervention participants were novice smartwatch users, as opposed to 84% of controls, and there was no significant difference in baseline rates of anxiety, activation, or self-rated health between the 2 groups. The incidence of new AF among smartwatch users was 6%. Participants who were prescribed smartwatches did not have a statistically significant change in anxiety, activation, or self-reported health as compared to those who were not prescribed smartwatches. The results held even after removing participants who received an AF alert on the watch.

Conclusion

The prescription of smartwatches to stroke survivors for AF monitoring does not adversely affect key patient-reported outcomes. Further research is needed to better inform the successful deployment of smartwatches in clinical practice.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

卒中幸存者的焦虑、患者激活和生活质量为房颤监测规定了智能手表
背景检测中风幸存者的心房颤动(AF)对于降低复发性中风的风险至关重要。智能手表已经成为一种方便而准确的AF诊断手段;然而,对危重患者报告结果的影响,包括焦虑、参与度和生活质量,仍不明确。目的研究智能手表AF检测处方与患者报告的焦虑、患者激活和自我报告的健康状况之间的关系。方法我们使用了Pulsewatch试验的数据,这是一项两阶段随机对照试验,包括50岁或50岁以上有缺血性中风病史的参与者。参与者被随机分配使用专有的智能手机智能手表应用程序进行30天的AF监测或不进行心律监测。在为期30天的研究前后进行了验证调查,以评估焦虑、患者激活以及自我评估的身心健康状况。使用逻辑回归和广义估计方程来检验用于AF监测的智能手表处方与患者报告结果变化之间的关联。结果共有110名参与者(平均年龄64岁,41%为女性,91%为非西班牙裔白人)接受了研究。70%的干预参与者是新手智能手表用户,而对照组的这一比例为84%,两组之间的焦虑、激活或自我评估健康的基线率没有显著差异。智能手表用户中新发AF的发生率为6%。与未服用智能手表的参与者相比,服用智能手表后的参与者在焦虑、激活或自我报告的健康状况方面没有统计学上的显著变化。即使在移除手表上收到AF警报的参与者后,结果仍然有效。结论为中风幸存者开具智能手表用于房颤监测的处方不会对关键患者报告的结果产生不利影响。需要进一步的研究来更好地为智能手表在临床实践中的成功部署提供信息。
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
Cardiovascular digital health journal
Cardiovascular digital health journal Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
58 days
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