Results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritis

Florence Schwarzenbach,1 Michèle Dao Trong,1 Laurent Grange,2 Philippe E Laurent,3 Herve Abry,4 Joël Cotten,5 Corinne Granger1 1Medical Affairs, Becton Dickinson Medical Pharmaceutical Systems, Le-Pont-de-Claix, France; 2Rheumatology Clinic, South University Hospital, Echirolles...

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Main Authors: Schwarzenbach F, Dao Trong M, Grange L, Laurent PE, Abry H, Cotten J, Granger C
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2014-02-01
Series:Patient Preference and Adherence
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/results-of-a-human-factors-experiment-of-the-usability-and-patient-acc-a15757
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spelling doaj-2f141a31355044ffafdafd7da59e4fba2020-11-24T21:28:15ZengDove Medical PressPatient Preference and Adherence1177-889X2014-02-012014default19920915757Results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritisSchwarzenbach FDao Trong MGrange LLaurent PEAbry HCotten JGranger C Florence Schwarzenbach,1 Michèle Dao Trong,1 Laurent Grange,2 Philippe E Laurent,3 Herve Abry,4 Joël Cotten,5 Corinne Granger1 1Medical Affairs, Becton Dickinson Medical Pharmaceutical Systems, Le-Pont-de-Claix, France; 2Rheumatology Clinic, South University Hospital, Echirolles, France; 3Creabio-ra SAS, Centre Hospitalier, Givors, France; 4Commercial Development Self Administration/Injectable Systems, Becton Dickinson Medical Pharmaceutical Systems, Le-Pont-de-Claix, France; 5Marketing, Becton Dickinson Medical Pharmaceutical Systems, Le-Pont-de-Claix, France Purpose: This study evaluated the human factors affecting the ease of use of a disposable autoinjector developed for subcutaneous self-injections performed by patients with chronic diseases. Materials and methods: This was a randomized, single-center study conducted with 65 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Patients performed six simulated injections. Assessments of patient device acceptance and device usability were made by patient reports and independent observations of compliance with the device instruction for use (IFU) following single injections and repeated injections. Results: A total of 390 simulated injections were performed. Patient device acceptance was high; more than 90% of patients found each of the tested criteria to be acceptable (>80% was required for statistical significance; P<0.016). Perceived ease of use and simplicity of the three-step process resulted in high acceptance scores: mean scores (± standard deviation) were 8.71 (±1.18) and 8.05 (±0.37), respectively, on a 0–10-point scale. Patients also expressed their acceptance with the ease and usefulness of the detection of the remaining drug in the autoinjector. In addition, 80% of patients declared that they would recommend the device to someone else. Globally, the human factors tested (age, sex, hand disability [Cochin score], extent of previous experience with self-injection [ie, expert or naïve]) had no impact on IFU device compliance. In particular, the lack of a Cochin score interaction indicated that the degree of hand disability is not a predictive factor of poor self-injection capability with this autoinjector. Conclusion: This study demonstrated a high level of patient acceptance for self-injection with this autoinjector among patients with rheumatoid arthritis. In particular, patients with severe hand disability were able to successfully comply with device IFU. Keywords: subcutaneous injection, autoinjector, human factors, usability, patient acceptancehttp://www.dovepress.com/results-of-a-human-factors-experiment-of-the-usability-and-patient-acc-a15757
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Schwarzenbach F
Dao Trong M
Grange L
Laurent PE
Abry H
Cotten J
Granger C
spellingShingle Schwarzenbach F
Dao Trong M
Grange L
Laurent PE
Abry H
Cotten J
Granger C
Results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
Patient Preference and Adherence
author_facet Schwarzenbach F
Dao Trong M
Grange L
Laurent PE
Abry H
Cotten J
Granger C
author_sort Schwarzenbach F
title Results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
title_short Results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
title_full Results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
title_fullStr Results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
title_full_unstemmed Results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
title_sort results of a human factors experiment of the usability and patient acceptance of a new autoinjector in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Patient Preference and Adherence
issn 1177-889X
publishDate 2014-02-01
description Florence Schwarzenbach,1 Michèle Dao Trong,1 Laurent Grange,2 Philippe E Laurent,3 Herve Abry,4 Joël Cotten,5 Corinne Granger1 1Medical Affairs, Becton Dickinson Medical Pharmaceutical Systems, Le-Pont-de-Claix, France; 2Rheumatology Clinic, South University Hospital, Echirolles, France; 3Creabio-ra SAS, Centre Hospitalier, Givors, France; 4Commercial Development Self Administration/Injectable Systems, Becton Dickinson Medical Pharmaceutical Systems, Le-Pont-de-Claix, France; 5Marketing, Becton Dickinson Medical Pharmaceutical Systems, Le-Pont-de-Claix, France Purpose: This study evaluated the human factors affecting the ease of use of a disposable autoinjector developed for subcutaneous self-injections performed by patients with chronic diseases. Materials and methods: This was a randomized, single-center study conducted with 65 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Patients performed six simulated injections. Assessments of patient device acceptance and device usability were made by patient reports and independent observations of compliance with the device instruction for use (IFU) following single injections and repeated injections. Results: A total of 390 simulated injections were performed. Patient device acceptance was high; more than 90% of patients found each of the tested criteria to be acceptable (>80% was required for statistical significance; P<0.016). Perceived ease of use and simplicity of the three-step process resulted in high acceptance scores: mean scores (± standard deviation) were 8.71 (±1.18) and 8.05 (±0.37), respectively, on a 0–10-point scale. Patients also expressed their acceptance with the ease and usefulness of the detection of the remaining drug in the autoinjector. In addition, 80% of patients declared that they would recommend the device to someone else. Globally, the human factors tested (age, sex, hand disability [Cochin score], extent of previous experience with self-injection [ie, expert or naïve]) had no impact on IFU device compliance. In particular, the lack of a Cochin score interaction indicated that the degree of hand disability is not a predictive factor of poor self-injection capability with this autoinjector. Conclusion: This study demonstrated a high level of patient acceptance for self-injection with this autoinjector among patients with rheumatoid arthritis. In particular, patients with severe hand disability were able to successfully comply with device IFU. Keywords: subcutaneous injection, autoinjector, human factors, usability, patient acceptance
url http://www.dovepress.com/results-of-a-human-factors-experiment-of-the-usability-and-patient-acc-a15757
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