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Impact of mobile health application on data collection and self-management of epilepsy

Title
Impact of mobile health application on data collection and self-management of epilepsy
Authors
Choi S.A.Lim K.Baek H.Yoo S.Cho A.Kim H.Hwang H.Kim K.J.
Ewha Authors
최선아
SCOPUS Author ID
최선아scopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
Epilepsy and Behavior
ISSN
1525-5050JCR Link
Citation
Epilepsy and Behavior vol. 119
Keywords
EpilepsyHealthcare dataMobile applicationSelf-management
Publisher
Academic Press Inc.
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Recent advances in mobile health have enabled health data collection, which includes seizure and medication tracking and epilepsy self-management. We developed a mobile epilepsy management application, integrated with a hospital electronic health record (EHR). In this prospective clinical trial, we assessed whether the mobile application provides quality healthcare data compared to conventional clinic visits, and enhances epilepsy self-management for patients with epilepsy. The study population includes patients with epilepsy (ages 15 years and older) and caregivers for children with epilepsy. Participants were provided access to the application for 90 days. We compared healthcare data collected from the mobile application with data obtained from clinic visits. The healthcare data included seizure records, seizure triggering factors, medication adherence rate, profiles of adverse events resulting from anti-seizure medication (ASM), and comorbidity screenings. In addition, we conducted baseline and follow-up questionnaires after the 90-day period to evaluate how this mobile application improved epilepsy knowledge and self-efficacy in seizure management. Data of 99 participants (18 patients with epilepsy and 81 caregivers) were analyzed. Among 24 individuals who had seizures, we obtained detailed seizure records from 13 individuals through clinic visits and for 18 from the application. Aside from the 6 individuals who reported their medication adherence during clinic visitation, half of the study participants had adherence rates of over 70%, as monitored through the application. However, the adherence rates were not reliable due to high variability. Twenty-three individuals reported 59 adverse reactions on the application, whereas 21 individuals reported 24 adverse reactions during clinic visits. We collected comorbidity data from 4 individuals during clinic visits. In comparison, 64 participants underwent comorbidity self-screening on the application, and 2 of them were referred to neuropsychiatric services. Compared to rare/non-users, app users demonstrated significant improvement in epilepsy knowledge score (p < 0.001) and self-efficacy score (p = 0.038). In conclusion, mobile health technology would help patients and caregivers to record their healthcare data and aid in self-management. Mobile health technology would provide an influential clinical validity in epilepsy care when users engage and actively maintain records on the application. © 2021 Elsevier Inc.
DOI
10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.107982
Appears in Collections:
의료원 > 의료원 > Journal papers
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