Perceptions of use and value for different types of digital health solutions among people with type 1 and 2 diabetes in France.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Norbert Hermanns, Paco Cerletti, Julie Laurent, Renza Scibilia, Sören Skovlund
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Abstract

Aims: This study examines the use, perceptions, and inequalities in access to Digital Health Solutions (DHS) among people with diabetes (PwD). It aims to identify factors influencing adoption and explore perceived benefits and barriers to using DHS, focusing on person-important outcomes such as physical health, mental burden, and access to care.

Methods: The primary objective of this feasibility study was to assess the intervention acceptability, feasibility, and app usability. The secondary aim is to explore preliminary intervention effects.

Methods: A cross-sectional online survey was conducted in France from April to July 2022. A total of 301 PwD (149 with type 1 diabetes [T1D], 152 with type 2 diabetes [T2D]) completed the study. The survey assessed the use of three DHS categories: information/education (DHS1), self-management support (DHS2), and data-sharing/collaborative care (DHS3). We used univariate and multivariate logistic regression to identify predictors of DHS use, including demographic, socioeconomic, psychological, and medical variables.

Results: DHS1 was the most commonly used category, followed by DHS2 and DHS3. PwD with T1D were more likely to use multiple DHS. Type of diabetes and perceived health status were the strongest predictors of DHS use. Surprisingly, people in poorer health were less likely to use DHS despite potentially benefiting most from them. DHS-naïve individuals expected more benefits but reported greater concerns, especially about information overload and data security. These concerns were stronger than the perceived benefits. For example, concerns about data security reduced the likelihood of using DHS2 and DHS3 by up to 89%.

Conclusion: The study highlights disparities in DHS adoption and the critical role of perceived barriers. Addressing these concerns-particularly among PwD in poorer health-and aligning DHS with outcomes that matter to patients may improve equitable adoption and diabetes care.

法国1型和2型糖尿病患者对不同类型数字健康解决方案的使用和价值的看法。
目的:本研究调查了糖尿病患者(PwD)在获取数字健康解决方案(DHS)方面的使用、认知和不平等。它的目的是确定影响采用的因素,并探索使用DHS的好处和障碍,重点关注对个人重要的结果,如身体健康、精神负担和获得护理的机会。方法:本可行性研究的主要目的是评估干预的可接受性、可行性和应用程序的可用性。第二个目的是探索初步干预效果。方法:于2022年4月至7月在法国进行横断面在线调查。共有301例PwD患者(其中1型糖尿病[T1D] 149例,2型糖尿病[T2D] 152例)完成了研究。调查评估了三个DHS类别的使用情况:信息/教育(DHS1)、自我管理支持(DHS2)和数据共享/协作护理(DHS3)。我们使用单变量和多变量逻辑回归来确定DHS使用的预测因素,包括人口统计、社会经济、心理和医学变量。结果:DHS1是最常用的分类,其次是DHS2和DHS3。合并T1D的PwD患者更有可能使用多个DHS。糖尿病类型和感知健康状况是DHS使用的最强预测因子。令人惊讶的是,健康状况较差的人不太可能使用国土安全部,尽管他们可能从中受益最多。DHS-naïve个人期望更多的好处,但报告更大的担忧,特别是信息过载和数据安全。这些担忧比预期的好处更强烈。例如,对数据安全的担忧将使用DHS2和DHS3的可能性降低了89%。结论:该研究突出了国土安全部采用的差异和感知障碍的关键作用。解决这些问题,特别是在健康状况较差的PwD中,并使DHS与对患者重要的结果相一致,可能会改善公平的收养和糖尿病护理。
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来源期刊
Acta Diabetologica
Acta Diabetologica 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
2.60%
发文量
180
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Acta Diabetologica is a journal that publishes reports of experimental and clinical research on diabetes mellitus and related metabolic diseases. Original contributions on biochemical, physiological, pathophysiological and clinical aspects of research on diabetes and metabolic diseases are welcome. Reports are published in the form of original articles, short communications and letters to the editor. Invited reviews and editorials are also published. A Methodology forum, which publishes contributions on methodological aspects of diabetes in vivo and in vitro, is also available. The Editor-in-chief will be pleased to consider articles describing new techniques (e.g., new transplantation methods, metabolic models), of innovative importance in the field of diabetes/metabolism. Finally, workshop reports are also welcome in Acta Diabetologica.
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