Impact of Consumer Wearables Data on Pediatric Surgery Clinicians' Management: Multi-Institutional Scenario-Based Usability Study.

Michela Carter, Samuel C Linton, Suhail Zeineddin, J Benjamin Pitt, Christopher De Boer, Angie Figueroa, Ankush Gosain, David Lanning, Aaron Lesher, Saleem Islam, Chethan Sathya, Jane L Holl, Hassan Mk Ghomrawi, Fizan Abdullah
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Abstract

Background: At present, parents lack objective methods to evaluate their child's postoperative recovery following discharge from the hospital. As a result, clinicians are dependent upon a parent's subjective assessment of the child's health status and the child's ability to communicate their symptoms. This subjective nature of home monitoring contributes to unnecessary emergency department (ED) use as well as delays in treatment. However, the integration of data remotely collected using a consumer wearable device has the potential to provide clinicians with objective metrics for postoperative patients to facilitate informed longitudinal, remote assessment.

Objective: This multi-institutional study aimed to evaluate the impact of adding actual and simulated objective recovery data that were collected remotely using a consumer wearable device to simulated postoperative telephone encounters on clinicians' management.

Methods: In total, 3 simulated telephone scenarios of patients after an appendectomy were presented to clinicians at 5 children's hospitals. Each scenario was then supplemented with wearable data concerning or reassuring against a postoperative complication. Clinicians rated their likelihood of ED referral before and after the addition of wearable data to evaluate if it changed their recommendation. Clinicians reported confidence in their decision-making.

Results: In total, 34 clinicians participated. Compared with the scenario alone, the addition of reassuring wearable data resulted in a decreased likelihood of ED referral for all 3 scenarios (P<.01). When presented with concerning wearable data, there was an increased likelihood of ED referral for 1 of 3 scenarios (P=.72, P=.17, and P<.001). At the institutional level, there was no difference between the 5 institutions in how the wearable data changed the likelihood of ED referral for all 3 scenarios. With the addition of wearable data, 76% (19/25) to 88% (21/24 and 22/25) of clinicians reported increased confidence in their recommendations.

Conclusions: The addition of wearable data to simulated telephone scenarios for postdischarge patients who underwent pediatric surgery impacted clinicians' remote patient management at 5 pediatric institutions and increased clinician confidence. Wearable devices are capable of providing real-time measures of recovery, which can be used as a postoperative monitoring tool to reduce delays in care and avoidable health care use.

消费类可穿戴设备数据对小儿外科临床医生管理的影响:基于场景的多机构可用性研究。
背景:目前,家长缺乏客观的方法来评估孩子出院后的术后恢复情况。因此,临床医生只能依赖家长对患儿健康状况的主观评估以及患儿表达症状的能力。家庭监测的这种主观性造成了不必要的急诊室(ED)使用和治疗延误。然而,整合使用消费类可穿戴设备远程收集的数据有可能为临床医生提供术后患者的客观指标,以促进知情的纵向远程评估:这项多机构研究旨在评估在模拟术后电话会诊中加入使用消费可穿戴设备远程收集的实际和模拟客观恢复数据对临床医生管理的影响:方法:总共向 5 家儿童医院的临床医生演示了 3 个阑尾切除术后患者的模拟电话情景。然后在每个场景中加入有关术后并发症的可穿戴数据,或对术后并发症进行安慰。在添加可穿戴数据前后,临床医生对转诊到急诊室的可能性进行评分,以评估是否改变了他们的建议。临床医生报告了对其决策的信心:共有 34 名临床医生参与。与单独的场景相比,在所有 3 个场景中,增加了令人放心的可穿戴数据后,急诊室转诊的可能性都降低了(PC 结论:在模拟场景中增加可穿戴数据后,急诊室转诊的可能性降低了:在儿科手术患者出院后的模拟电话情景中加入可穿戴数据,对5家儿科机构临床医生的远程患者管理产生了影响,并增强了临床医生的信心。可穿戴设备能够提供实时恢复情况,可用作术后监测工具,减少护理延误和可避免的医疗使用。
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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CiteScore
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