Cargando…

Unmet Communication and Information Needs for Patients with IBD: Implications for Mobile Health Technology

AIMS: In order to develop an application that addresses the most significant challenges facing IBD patients, this qualitative study explored the major hurdles of living with IBD, the information needs of IBD patients, and how application technology may be used to improve quality of life. METHODS: 15...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Khan, Sameer, Dasrath, Florence, Farghaly, Sara, Otobo, Emamuzo, Riaz, Muhammad Safwan, Rogers, Jason, Castillo, Anabella, Atreja, Ashish
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5312751/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28217532
http://dx.doi.org/10.9734/BJMMR/2016/21884
_version_ 1782508248534876160
author Khan, Sameer
Dasrath, Florence
Farghaly, Sara
Otobo, Emamuzo
Riaz, Muhammad Safwan
Rogers, Jason
Castillo, Anabella
Atreja, Ashish
author_facet Khan, Sameer
Dasrath, Florence
Farghaly, Sara
Otobo, Emamuzo
Riaz, Muhammad Safwan
Rogers, Jason
Castillo, Anabella
Atreja, Ashish
author_sort Khan, Sameer
collection PubMed
description AIMS: In order to develop an application that addresses the most significant challenges facing IBD patients, this qualitative study explored the major hurdles of living with IBD, the information needs of IBD patients, and how application technology may be used to improve quality of life. METHODS: 15 IBD patients participated in two focus groups of 120 minutes each. Data collection was achieved by combining focus groups with surveys and direct observation of patients looking at a patient-engaged app (HealthPROMISE) screenshots. The survey elicited information on demographics, health literacy and quality of life through the Short IBD Questionnaire (SIBDQ). RESULTS: The needs of IBD patients center around communication as it relates to both patient information needs and navigating the social impacts of IBD on patients’ lives: a. Communication Challenges regarding Information Needs: Patients cited a doctor-patient communication divide where there is a continued lack of goal setting when discussing treatments and a lack of objectivity in disease control. When objectively compared with the SIBDQ, nearly half of the patients in the focus groups wrongly estimated their IBD control. b. Communication Challenges regarding Social Impacts of IBD: Patients strongly felt that while IBD disrupts routines, adds significant stress, and contributes to a sense of isolation, the impact of these issues would be significantly alleviated through more conversation and better support. c. Implication for Mobile Health Solutions: Patients want a tool that improves tracking of symptoms, medication adherence and provides education. Physician feedback to patient input on an application is required for long-term sustainability. CONCLUSIONS: IBD patients need mobile health technologies that evaluate disease control and the goals of care. Patients feel an objective assessment of their disease control, goal setting and physician feedback will greatly enhance utilization of all mobile health applications.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5312751
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-53127512017-02-16 Unmet Communication and Information Needs for Patients with IBD: Implications for Mobile Health Technology Khan, Sameer Dasrath, Florence Farghaly, Sara Otobo, Emamuzo Riaz, Muhammad Safwan Rogers, Jason Castillo, Anabella Atreja, Ashish Br J Med Med Res Article AIMS: In order to develop an application that addresses the most significant challenges facing IBD patients, this qualitative study explored the major hurdles of living with IBD, the information needs of IBD patients, and how application technology may be used to improve quality of life. METHODS: 15 IBD patients participated in two focus groups of 120 minutes each. Data collection was achieved by combining focus groups with surveys and direct observation of patients looking at a patient-engaged app (HealthPROMISE) screenshots. The survey elicited information on demographics, health literacy and quality of life through the Short IBD Questionnaire (SIBDQ). RESULTS: The needs of IBD patients center around communication as it relates to both patient information needs and navigating the social impacts of IBD on patients’ lives: a. Communication Challenges regarding Information Needs: Patients cited a doctor-patient communication divide where there is a continued lack of goal setting when discussing treatments and a lack of objectivity in disease control. When objectively compared with the SIBDQ, nearly half of the patients in the focus groups wrongly estimated their IBD control. b. Communication Challenges regarding Social Impacts of IBD: Patients strongly felt that while IBD disrupts routines, adds significant stress, and contributes to a sense of isolation, the impact of these issues would be significantly alleviated through more conversation and better support. c. Implication for Mobile Health Solutions: Patients want a tool that improves tracking of symptoms, medication adherence and provides education. Physician feedback to patient input on an application is required for long-term sustainability. CONCLUSIONS: IBD patients need mobile health technologies that evaluate disease control and the goals of care. Patients feel an objective assessment of their disease control, goal setting and physician feedback will greatly enhance utilization of all mobile health applications. 2016 /pmc/articles/PMC5312751/ /pubmed/28217532 http://dx.doi.org/10.9734/BJMMR/2016/21884 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Khan, Sameer
Dasrath, Florence
Farghaly, Sara
Otobo, Emamuzo
Riaz, Muhammad Safwan
Rogers, Jason
Castillo, Anabella
Atreja, Ashish
Unmet Communication and Information Needs for Patients with IBD: Implications for Mobile Health Technology
title Unmet Communication and Information Needs for Patients with IBD: Implications for Mobile Health Technology
title_full Unmet Communication and Information Needs for Patients with IBD: Implications for Mobile Health Technology
title_fullStr Unmet Communication and Information Needs for Patients with IBD: Implications for Mobile Health Technology
title_full_unstemmed Unmet Communication and Information Needs for Patients with IBD: Implications for Mobile Health Technology
title_short Unmet Communication and Information Needs for Patients with IBD: Implications for Mobile Health Technology
title_sort unmet communication and information needs for patients with ibd: implications for mobile health technology
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5312751/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28217532
http://dx.doi.org/10.9734/BJMMR/2016/21884
work_keys_str_mv AT khansameer unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology
AT dasrathflorence unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology
AT farghalysara unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology
AT otoboemamuzo unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology
AT riazmuhammadsafwan unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology
AT rogersjason unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology
AT castilloanabella unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology
AT atrejaashish unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology
AT unmetcommunicationandinformationneedsforpatientswithibdimplicationsformobilehealthtechnology