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mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge

BACKGROUND: mHealth interventions that use mobile phones as instruments for illness management are gaining popularity. Research examining mobile phone‒based mHealth programs for people with psychosis has shown that these approaches are feasible, acceptable, and clinically promising. However, most mH...

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Autores principales: Ben-Zeev, Dror, Scherer, Emily A, Gottlieb, Jennifer D, Rotondi, Armando J, Brunette, Mary F, Achtyes, Eric D, Mueser, Kim T, Gingerich, Susan, Brenner, Christopher J, Begale, Mark, Mohr, David C, Schooler, Nina, Marcy, Patricia, Robinson, Delbert G, Kane, John M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4999306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27465803
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/mental.6348
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author Ben-Zeev, Dror
Scherer, Emily A
Gottlieb, Jennifer D
Rotondi, Armando J
Brunette, Mary F
Achtyes, Eric D
Mueser, Kim T
Gingerich, Susan
Brenner, Christopher J
Begale, Mark
Mohr, David C
Schooler, Nina
Marcy, Patricia
Robinson, Delbert G
Kane, John M
author_facet Ben-Zeev, Dror
Scherer, Emily A
Gottlieb, Jennifer D
Rotondi, Armando J
Brunette, Mary F
Achtyes, Eric D
Mueser, Kim T
Gingerich, Susan
Brenner, Christopher J
Begale, Mark
Mohr, David C
Schooler, Nina
Marcy, Patricia
Robinson, Delbert G
Kane, John M
author_sort Ben-Zeev, Dror
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: mHealth interventions that use mobile phones as instruments for illness management are gaining popularity. Research examining mobile phone‒based mHealth programs for people with psychosis has shown that these approaches are feasible, acceptable, and clinically promising. However, most mHealth initiatives involving people with schizophrenia have spanned periods ranging from a few days to several weeks and have typically involved participants who were clinically stable. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to evaluate the viability of extended mHealth interventions for people with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders following hospital discharge. Specifically, we set out to examine the following: (1) Can individuals be engaged with a mobile phone intervention program during this high-risk period?, (2) Are age, gender, racial background, or hospitalization history associated with their engagement or persistence in using a mobile phone intervention over time?, and (3) Does engagement differ by characteristics of the mHealth intervention itself (ie, pre-programmed vs on-demand functions)? METHODS: We examined mHealth intervention use and demographic and clinical predictors of engagement in 342 individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders who were given the FOCUS mobile phone intervention as part of a technology-assisted relapse prevention program during the 6-month high-risk period following hospitalization. RESULTS: On average, participants engaged with FOCUS for 82% of the weeks they had the mobile phone. People who used FOCUS more often continued using it over longer periods: 44% used the intervention over 5-6 months, on average 4.3 days a week. Gender, race, age, and number of past psychiatric hospitalizations were associated with engagement. Females used FOCUS on average 0.4 more days a week than males. White participants engaged on average 0.7 days more a week than African-Americans and responded to prompts on 0.7 days more a week than Hispanic participants. Younger participants (age 18-29) had 0.4 fewer days of on-demand use a week than individuals who were 30-45 years old and 0.5 fewer days a week than older participants (age 46-60). Participants with fewer past hospitalizations (1-6) engaged on average 0.2 more days a week than those with seven or more. mHealth program functions were associated with engagement. Participants responded to prompts more often than they self-initiated on-demand tools, but both FOCUS functions were used regularly. Both types of intervention use declined over time (on-demand use had a steeper decline). Although mHealth use declined, the majority of individuals used both on-demand and system-prompted functions regularly throughout their participation. Therefore, neither function is extraneous. CONCLUSIONS: The findings demonstrated that individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders can actively engage with a clinically supported mobile phone intervention for up to 6 months following hospital discharge. mHealth may be useful in reaching a clinical population that is typically difficult to engage during high-risk periods.
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spelling pubmed-49993062016-09-09 mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge Ben-Zeev, Dror Scherer, Emily A Gottlieb, Jennifer D Rotondi, Armando J Brunette, Mary F Achtyes, Eric D Mueser, Kim T Gingerich, Susan Brenner, Christopher J Begale, Mark Mohr, David C Schooler, Nina Marcy, Patricia Robinson, Delbert G Kane, John M JMIR Ment Health Original Paper BACKGROUND: mHealth interventions that use mobile phones as instruments for illness management are gaining popularity. Research examining mobile phone‒based mHealth programs for people with psychosis has shown that these approaches are feasible, acceptable, and clinically promising. However, most mHealth initiatives involving people with schizophrenia have spanned periods ranging from a few days to several weeks and have typically involved participants who were clinically stable. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to evaluate the viability of extended mHealth interventions for people with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders following hospital discharge. Specifically, we set out to examine the following: (1) Can individuals be engaged with a mobile phone intervention program during this high-risk period?, (2) Are age, gender, racial background, or hospitalization history associated with their engagement or persistence in using a mobile phone intervention over time?, and (3) Does engagement differ by characteristics of the mHealth intervention itself (ie, pre-programmed vs on-demand functions)? METHODS: We examined mHealth intervention use and demographic and clinical predictors of engagement in 342 individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders who were given the FOCUS mobile phone intervention as part of a technology-assisted relapse prevention program during the 6-month high-risk period following hospitalization. RESULTS: On average, participants engaged with FOCUS for 82% of the weeks they had the mobile phone. People who used FOCUS more often continued using it over longer periods: 44% used the intervention over 5-6 months, on average 4.3 days a week. Gender, race, age, and number of past psychiatric hospitalizations were associated with engagement. Females used FOCUS on average 0.4 more days a week than males. White participants engaged on average 0.7 days more a week than African-Americans and responded to prompts on 0.7 days more a week than Hispanic participants. Younger participants (age 18-29) had 0.4 fewer days of on-demand use a week than individuals who were 30-45 years old and 0.5 fewer days a week than older participants (age 46-60). Participants with fewer past hospitalizations (1-6) engaged on average 0.2 more days a week than those with seven or more. mHealth program functions were associated with engagement. Participants responded to prompts more often than they self-initiated on-demand tools, but both FOCUS functions were used regularly. Both types of intervention use declined over time (on-demand use had a steeper decline). Although mHealth use declined, the majority of individuals used both on-demand and system-prompted functions regularly throughout their participation. Therefore, neither function is extraneous. CONCLUSIONS: The findings demonstrated that individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders can actively engage with a clinically supported mobile phone intervention for up to 6 months following hospital discharge. mHealth may be useful in reaching a clinical population that is typically difficult to engage during high-risk periods. JMIR Publications 2016-07-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4999306/ /pubmed/27465803 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/mental.6348 Text en ©Dror Ben-Zeev, Emily A. Scherer, Jennifer D Gottlieb, Armando J Rotondi, Mary F Brunette, Eric D Achtyes, Kim T Mueser, Susan Gingerich, Christopher J Brenner, Mark Begale, David C. Mohr, Nina Schooler, Patricia Marcy, Delbert G Robinson, John M Kane. Originally published in JMIR Mental Health (http://mental.jmir.org), 27.07.2016. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Mental Health, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://mental.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Ben-Zeev, Dror
Scherer, Emily A
Gottlieb, Jennifer D
Rotondi, Armando J
Brunette, Mary F
Achtyes, Eric D
Mueser, Kim T
Gingerich, Susan
Brenner, Christopher J
Begale, Mark
Mohr, David C
Schooler, Nina
Marcy, Patricia
Robinson, Delbert G
Kane, John M
mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge
title mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge
title_full mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge
title_fullStr mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge
title_full_unstemmed mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge
title_short mHealth for Schizophrenia: Patient Engagement With a Mobile Phone Intervention Following Hospital Discharge
title_sort mhealth for schizophrenia: patient engagement with a mobile phone intervention following hospital discharge
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4999306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27465803
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/mental.6348
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