The Pain Intervention & Digital Research Program: an operational report on combining digital research with outpatient chronic disease management

Melanie Fu, Joanna Shen, Cheryl Gu, Ellina Oliveira, Ellisha Shinchuk, Hannah Isaac, Zacharia Isaac, Danielle L. Sarno, Jennifer L. Kurz, David A. Silbersweig, J. Onnela, Daniel S. Barron
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Abstract

Chronic pain affects up to 28% of U.S. adults, costing ∼$560 billion each year. Chronic pain is an instantiation of the perennial complexity of how to best assess and treat chronic diseases over time, especially in populations where age, medical comorbidities, and socioeconomic barriers may limit access to care. Chronic disease management poses a particular challenge for the healthcare system's transition from fee-for-service to value and risk-based reimbursement models. Remote, passive real-time data from smartphones could enable more timely interventions and simultaneously manage risk and promote better patient outcomes through predicting and preventing costly adverse outcomes; however, there is limited evidence whether remote monitoring is feasible, especially in the case of older patients with chronic pain. Here, we introduce the Pain Intervention and Digital Research (Pain-IDR) Program as a pilot initiative launched in 2022 that combines outpatient clinical care and digital health research. The Pain-IDR seeks to test whether functional status can be assessed passively, through a smartphone application, in older patients with chronic pain. We discuss two perspectives—a narrative approach that describes the clinical settings and rationale behind changes to the operational design, and a quantitative approach that measures patient recruitment, patient experience, and HERMES data characteristics. Since launch, we have had 77 participants with a mean age of 55.52, of which n = 38 have fully completed the 6 months of data collection necessitated to be considered in the study, with an active data collection rate of 51% and passive data rate of 78%. We further present preliminary operational strategies that we have adopted as we have learned to adapt the Pain-IDR to a productive clinical service. Overall, the Pain-IDR has successfully engaged older patients with chronic pain and presents useful insights for others seeking to implement digital phenotyping in other chronic disease settings.
疼痛干预与数字研究计划:关于将数字研究与门诊慢性病管理相结合的业务报告
慢性疼痛影响着高达 28% 的美国成年人,每年造成的损失高达 5,600 亿美元。慢性疼痛是长期复杂问题的一个实例,即如何在一段时间内对慢性疾病进行最佳评估和治疗,尤其是在年龄、合并症和社会经济障碍可能限制获得医疗服务的人群中。慢性病管理对医疗保健系统从收费服务向价值和基于风险的报销模式过渡提出了特别的挑战。来自智能手机的远程、被动实时数据可以实现更及时的干预,同时通过预测和预防代价高昂的不良后果来管理风险并改善患者的治疗效果;然而,远程监测是否可行的证据还很有限,尤其是对于患有慢性疼痛的老年患者而言。在此,我们介绍疼痛干预与数字研究(Pain-IDR)计划,这是一项于2022年启动的试点计划,将门诊临床护理与数字健康研究相结合。疼痛干预和数字研究计划旨在测试是否可以通过智能手机应用被动评估老年慢性疼痛患者的功能状态。我们从两个角度进行了讨论--一个是描述临床环境和操作设计变化背后原理的叙述方法,另一个是测量患者招募、患者体验和 HERMES 数据特征的定量方法。自推出以来,我们已有 77 名参与者,平均年龄为 55.52 岁,其中 n = 38 人已完成了 6 个月的数据收集,主动数据收集率为 51%,被动数据收集率为 78%。我们进一步介绍了我们在学习如何将疼痛-IDR 适应于富有成效的临床服务时所采取的初步操作策略。总之,疼痛-IDR 成功地吸引了老年慢性疼痛患者的参与,并为其他寻求在其他慢性疾病环境中实施数字表型的人提供了有益的启示。
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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