根据两项帕金森病队列研究的见解优化腕戴式可穿戴设备的依从性

IF 6.7 1区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES
Marjan J. Meinders, Laura Heathers, King Chung Ho, Laura Russell, Chris Li, Bastiaan R. Bloem, William J. Marks Jr, Ritu Kapur
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引用次数: 0

摘要

可穿戴技术可以实现实时、连续、无创的数据收集,这是长期合规的必要条件。个性化帕金森项目(PPP)和帕金森进展标记计划(PPMI)使用了Verily研究手表。参与者,包括被诊断患有帕金森病(PD)、前驱帕金森病(PD)和健康对照的人,被指示每天佩戴手表长达23小时,而不显示数据或向参与者报告数据。评估了合规性措施和用户体验。集中式支持模型确定了数据收集的障碍,并实现了主动外展。2年内,平均每天穿着时间PPP为21.9小时,平均每天穿着时间PPMI为21.1-22.2小时。参与者对帕金森病的研究积极性很高。这些结果突出了在不提供个人数据的情况下实现强烈参与的策略。这种方法为研究设计提供了有价值的见解,在研究设计中,将数据返回给参与者可能会引入偏见或影响数据完整性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Optimizing wrist-worn wearable compliance with insights from two Parkinson’s disease cohort studies

Optimizing wrist-worn wearable compliance with insights from two Parkinson’s disease cohort studies

Wearable technologies enable real-time, continuous, noninvasive data collection, where long-term compliance is essential. The Personalized Parkinson Project (PPP) and the Parkinson’s Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) utilized the Verily Study Watch. Participants, including people diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease (PD), prodromal PD, and healthy controls, were instructed to wear the watch for up to 23 h daily without data displaying or reporting data back to the participant. Compliance measures and user experiences were evaluated. A centralized support model identified barriers to data collection and enabled proactive outreach. Median daily wear time was 21.9 h for PPP and 21.1–22.2 h per day for PPMI over 2 years. Participants were highly motivated contributing to PD research. These results highlight strategies for achieving strong engagement without providing individual data. This approach offers valuable insights for study designs where returning data to participants could introduce bias or affect the data integrity.

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来源期刊
NPJ Parkinson's Disease
NPJ Parkinson's Disease Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
5.70%
发文量
156
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: npj Parkinson's Disease is a comprehensive open access journal that covers a wide range of research areas related to Parkinson's disease. It publishes original studies in basic science, translational research, and clinical investigations. The journal is dedicated to advancing our understanding of Parkinson's disease by exploring various aspects such as anatomy, etiology, genetics, cellular and molecular physiology, neurophysiology, epidemiology, and therapeutic development. By providing free and immediate access to the scientific and Parkinson's disease community, npj Parkinson's Disease promotes collaboration and knowledge sharing among researchers and healthcare professionals.
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