为手部骨关节炎患者开发 "快乐之手 "自我管理应用程序:可行性研究。

IF 2 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Anne Therese Tveter, Cecilie Varsi, Marit Kristin Maarnes, Stein Jarle Pedersen, Barbara S Christensen, Thale Beate Blanck, Sissel B Nyheim, Tim Pelle, Ingvild Kjeken
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:建议将患者教育、手部锻炼和使用辅助设备作为手部骨关节炎(OA)患者的一线治疗方法。然而,基层医疗机构为这一患者群体提供的护理服务质量并不理想:总体目标是为手部 OA 患者开发并评估基于应用程序的自我管理干预措施的可行性。这项可行性研究旨在评估自我报告的可用性和满意度、治疗效果和护理质量的变化、坚持锻炼的情况以及患者使用该应用程序的体验:开发和可行性测试遵循医学研究委员会复杂干预措施开发和评估框架的前两个阶段,并与患者研究合作伙伴(PRPs)密切合作进行。采用为期 3 个月的前-后混合方法设计来评估可行性。招募了 40 岁以上被诊断为手部有症状的疼痛性 OA 的男性和女性。可用性采用系统可用性量表(0-100 分)进行评估,满意度、实用性、疼痛和僵硬程度则采用数字评级量表(NRS 分值为 0-10 分)进行评估。手部活动能力采用手部活动能力量表(MAP-Hand)(1-4)进行测量,握力采用贾马尔测力计(公斤)进行评估,护理质量自我报告采用骨关节炎质量指标问卷(0-100)进行评估。如果参与者在至少 8 周内每周至少完成 2 次锻炼,则被视为坚持锻炼。我们还开展了焦点小组讨论,以探讨参与者使用该应用程序的经验。使用配对样本 t 检验(平均变化和 95% CI)对变化进行分析,显著性水平设定为 PResults:第一版 "快乐双手 "应用程序是根据PRP的需求和要求、循证治疗建议以及手部OA患者的经验开发的。该应用程序旨在通过一系列信息视频、锻炼视频、问卷调查、测验和定制反馈,在 3 个月的时间内指导参与者。可行性研究包括 71 名参与者(平均年龄 64 岁,SD 8;n=61,86% 为女性),其中 57 人(80%)在 3 个月后完成了评估。评估的可用性(平均 91.5 分,标准差 9.2 分)、实用性(中位数 8 分,IQR 7-10 分)和满意度(中位数 8 分,IQR 7-10 分)都很高。在自我报告的护理质量方面观察到显著改善(36.4 分,95% CI 29.7-43.1,PC 结论:患者认为基于应用程序的自我管理干预非常实用。结果进一步表明,该干预措施可改善护理质量、握力、活动能力、疼痛和僵硬程度。不过,最终结论还需要通过有影响力的随机对照试验来证实:试验注册:NCT05150171。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Development of the Happy Hands Self-Management App for People with Hand Osteoarthritis: Feasibility Study.

Background: Patient education, hand exercises, and the use of assistive devices are recommended as first-line treatments for individuals with hand osteoarthritis (OA). However, the quality of care services for this patient group is suboptimal in primary care.

Objective: The overarching goal was to develop and evaluate feasibility of an app-based self-management intervention for people with hand OA. This feasibility study aims to assess self-reported usability and satisfaction, change in outcomes and quality-of-care, exercise adherence and patients' experiences using the app.

Methods: The development and feasibility testing followed the first 2 phases of the Medical Research Council framework for the development and evaluation of complex interventions and were conducted in close collaboration with patient research partners (PRPs). A 3-month pre-post mixed methods design was used to evaluate feasibility. Men and women over 40 years of age diagnosed with painful, symptomatic hand OA were recruited. Usability was assessed using the System Usability Scale (0-100), while satisfaction, usefulness, pain, and stiffness were evaluated using a numeric rating scale (NRS score from 0 to 10). The activity performance of the hand was measured using the Measure of Activity Performance of the Hand (MAP-Hand) (1-4), grip strength was assessed with a Jamar dynamometer (kg), and self-reported quality of care was evaluated using the Osteoarthritis Quality Indicator questionnaire (0-100). Participants were deemed adherent if they completed at least 2 exercise sessions per week for a minimum of 8 weeks. Focus groups were conducted to explore participants' experiences using the app. Changes were analyzed using a paired sample t test (mean change and 95% CI), with the significance level set at P<.05.

Results: The first version of the Happy Hands app was developed based on the needs and requirements of the PRPs, evidence-based treatment recommendations, and the experiences of individuals living with hand OA. The app was designed to guide participants through a series of informational videos, exercise videos, questionnaires, quizzes, and customized feedback over a 3-month period. The feasibility study included 71 participants (mean age 64 years, SD 8; n=61, 86%, women), of whom 57 (80%) completed the assessment after 3 months. Usability (mean 91.5 points, SD 9.2 points), usefulness (median 8, IQR 7-10), and satisfaction (median 8, IQR 7-10) were high. Significant improvements were observed in self-reported quality of care (36.4 points, 95% CI 29.7-43.1, P<.001), grip strength (right: 2.9 kg, 95% CI 1.7-4.1; left: 3.2 kg, 95% CI 1.9-4.6, P<.001), activity performance (0.18 points, 95% CI 0.11-0.25, P<.001), pain (1.7 points, 95% CI 1.2-2.2, P<.001), and stiffness (1.9 points, 95% CI 1.3-2.4, P=.001) after 3 months. Of the 71 participants, 53 (75%) were adherent to the exercise program. The focus groups supported these results and led to the implementation of several enhancements in the second version of the app.

Conclusions: The app-based self-management intervention was deemed highly usable and useful by patients. The results further indicated that the intervention may improve quality of care, grip strength, activity performance, pain, and stiffness. However, definitive conclusions need to be confirmed in a powered randomized controlled trial.

Trial registration: NCT05150171.

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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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