The Living Lab at Home: Feasibility and Acceptability of Multimodal In-Home Data Collection Among Youth Across the Developmental Spectrum.

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Katelynn E Boerner, Veronica Dudarev, Leora Pearl-Dowler, Marie-Noelle Wharton, Harold Siden, Liisa Holsti, Tim F Oberlander
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Abstract

Objective: Dynamic, real-time, in-home methods of data collection are increasingly common in child health research. However, these methods are rarely cocreated or used with families of youth with developmental disabilities. We aimed to determine the feasibility of codesigned methods for in-home data collection for youth across the developmental spectrum.

Methods: Sixteen youth (14-18 years) with autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, and/or chronic pain completed 14 days of data collection, wearing an accelerometer, answering Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) questionnaires, and collecting salivary cortisol samples. Participants completed a poststudy interview regarding their experiences. Data were analyzed for feasibility, quantity, and quality.

Results: At least 1 EMA response was provided on 73% of days, with 54% of the total number of administered prompts answered before the next prompt arrived. In total, 77% of participants wore the accelerometer ≥10 hours for at least 7 days. Adherence to 8-day saliva sampling after accounting for protocol violations and dry samples was 28%. No significant adverse events were reported aside from mild emotional distress (25%). Families reported generally high satisfaction, willingness to participate again, and acceptability, with moderate burden and interference. Qualitative interviews described: (1) the research question's value to the family as a motivator of engagement; (2) in-home data collection is not a passive or neutral experience; (3) personalized approaches and context are important to families; and (4) a clear need for continued iteration and engagement.

Conclusion: In-home multimodal data collection is potentially feasible for families across the developmental spectrum but requires iteration based on family feedback to increase adherence.

家庭生活实验室:在不同发育阶段的青少年中开展多模式家庭数据收集的可行性和可接受性。
目的:动态、实时、居家数据收集方法在儿童健康研究中越来越常见。然而,这些方法很少与发育障碍青少年的家庭共同设计或使用。我们旨在确定针对不同发育谱系青少年的家庭数据收集编码设计方法的可行性:16 名患有自闭症谱系障碍、大脑性麻痹和/或慢性疼痛的青少年(14-18 岁)完成了为期 14 天的数据收集,他们佩戴了加速度计,回答了生态学瞬间评估 (EMA) 问卷,并收集了唾液皮质醇样本。参与者还完成了有关其经历的研究后访谈。我们对数据的可行性、数量和质量进行了分析:73%的参与者至少回答了一次 EMA 问卷,54%的参与者在下一次提示到来之前回答了全部提示。总共有 77% 的参与者佩戴加速度计至少 7 天,时间≥10 小时。在考虑了违反协议和干样本的情况后,8 天唾液采样的坚持率为 28%。除了轻微的情绪困扰(25%)外,没有重大不良事件报告。患者家属普遍表示满意,愿意再次参与,接受度高,负担和干扰程度适中。定性访谈描述了:(1)研究问题对家庭的价值是参与的动力;(2)居家数据收集不是一种被动或中立的体验;(3)个性化方法和背景对家庭很重要;以及(4)对持续迭代和参与的明确需求:家庭多模态数据收集对不同发育阶段的家庭都具有潜在的可行性,但需要根据家庭反馈进行迭代,以提高依从性。
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
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
8.30%
发文量
155
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics (JDBP) is a leading resource for clinicians, teachers, and researchers involved in pediatric healthcare and child development. This important journal covers some of the most challenging issues affecting child development and behavior.
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