Monitoring People With COVID-19 at Home With the COVIDFree@Home Program: Feasibility Cohort Study.

IF 2 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Andrea S Gershon, Alex Mariakakis, Eyal de Lara, Joseph Munn, Maryann Calligan, Daniyal Liaqat, Salaar Liaqat, Junlin Chen, Teresa To, Philip W Lam, Andrew Simor, Adrienne K Chan, Nisha Andany, Sameer Masood, Nick Daneman, Tiffany Chan, Christopher Graham, Vikram Comondore, Andre de Moulliac, Alice Y Tu, Robert Wu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: During the COVID-19 pandemic, many with acute infection isolated at home, with a small but significant number requiring hospitalization. At the time, since the pathogen was fairly unknown, clinicians were uncertain about which patients would rapidly deteriorate and need hospitalization. We developed the COVIDFree@Home smartphone app and clinician dashboard to monitor and support people managing at home with acute COVID-19 infection. It was uncertain whether such an app would be used by patients and whether it would support patient care. This knowledge would inform telemedicine and digital health tools being used to deliver care to patients remotely at that time.

Objective: This study aimed to determine the feasibility of using a smartphone app and clinician dashboard for remote clinical monitoring of people with COVID-19 at home.

Methods: A feasibility study set at 3 hospital sites (University Health Network, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, and Trillium Health Partners) between 2020 and 2022 was conducted. Participants newly diagnosed with COVID-19 were asked to enter data into a smartphone app called COVIDFree@Home twice daily for 10 days while isolating at home. Their data, including symptoms, temperature, and oxygen saturation, were monitored on a clinician-facing dashboard. The primary outcome of feasibility was the number of patients who used the app. We also examined patient satisfaction through a survey questionnaire.

Results: A total of 431 patients were recruited, out of which 229 (56.5%) were females and the average age was 38.9 (SD 12.8) years. There were 376 (87.2%) participants who used the app to report symptoms or oxygen saturation at least once. Among these participants, 373 (99.2%) reported symptoms and 363 (96.5%) reported oxygen saturation. Participants reported symptoms an average of 1.7 (SD 1.1) times per day for a median of 5 (IQR 3-8) days. Oxygen saturation levels were reported 1.5 times per day for a median of 6 (IQR 4-9) days. There were 19 hospitalizations (4.4%) among study participants. Most patients felt comfortable using the app, felt reassured their data was being monitored and did not have privacy concerns.

Conclusions: Patients with acute COVID-19 infection engaged with a remote home monitoring platform, however, not at the recommended frequency or duration. Remote patient monitoring of acute respiratory infection appears viable and can offer patients reassurance. It has the potential to reduce strain on the health care system during future pandemics, but further evidence is required to demonstrate improved health outcomes.

通过COVIDFree@Home项目在家监测COVID-19患者:可行性队列研究。
背景:在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,许多急性感染患者在家中被隔离,需要住院治疗的人数不多,但数量很大。当时,由于病原体相当未知,临床医生不确定哪些患者会迅速恶化并需要住院治疗。我们开发了COVIDFree@Home智能手机应用程序和临床医生仪表板,以监测和支持急性COVID-19感染患者在家管理。目前还不确定这样的应用程序是否会被患者使用,以及它是否会支持患者护理。这方面的知识将为远程医疗和数字保健工具提供信息,这些工具当时用于远程向患者提供护理。目的:本研究旨在确定使用智能手机应用程序和临床医生仪表板在家远程临床监测COVID-19患者的可行性。方法:在2020 - 2022年期间,对3家医院(University Health Network, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Trillium Health Partners)进行可行性研究。新诊断出COVID-19的参与者被要求在家中隔离的10天内每天两次将数据输入智能手机应用COVIDFree@Home。他们的数据,包括症状、体温和血氧饱和度,在一个面向临床医生的仪表板上进行监测。可行性的主要结果是使用该应用程序的患者数量。我们还通过调查问卷调查了患者满意度。结果:共纳入431例患者,其中女性229例(56.5%),平均年龄38.9岁(SD 12.8)。有376名(87.2%)参与者使用该应用程序报告至少一次症状或血氧饱和度。在这些参与者中,373人(99.2%)报告了症状,363人(96.5%)报告了血氧饱和度。参与者报告症状平均每天1.7次(SD 1.1),中位数为5 (IQR 3-8)天。每天报告1.5次血氧饱和度,中位数为6 (IQR 4-9)天。研究参与者中有19人住院(4.4%)。大多数患者在使用这款应用时感觉很舒服,他们感到自己的数据被监控了,而且没有隐私问题。结论:急性COVID-19感染患者使用远程家庭监测平台的次数和持续时间均未达到推荐的频率和持续时间。对急性呼吸道感染患者进行远程监测似乎是可行的,并可使患者放心。它有可能在未来的大流行期间减轻卫生保健系统的压力,但需要进一步的证据来证明改善的卫生结果。
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
JMIR Formative Research
JMIR Formative Research Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
579
审稿时长
12 weeks
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