Evaluation of an eHealth Intervention in Chronic Care for Frail Older People: Why Adherence is the First Target

BackgroundOlder people suffering from frailty often receive fragmented chronic care from multiple professionals. According to the literature, there is an urgent need for coordination of care. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to investigate the effectivenes...

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Main Authors: Makai, Peter, Perry, Marieke, Robben, Sarah HM, Schers, Henk J, Heinen, Maud M, Olde Rikkert, Marcel GM, Melis, René F
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2014-06-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2014/6/e156/
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spelling doaj-46bca3a8c8684d29a8b46a68a11a79962021-04-02T21:35:57ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712014-06-01166e15610.2196/jmir.3057Evaluation of an eHealth Intervention in Chronic Care for Frail Older People: Why Adherence is the First TargetMakai, PeterPerry, MariekeRobben, Sarah HMSchers, Henk JHeinen, Maud MOlde Rikkert, Marcel GMMelis, René F BackgroundOlder people suffering from frailty often receive fragmented chronic care from multiple professionals. According to the literature, there is an urgent need for coordination of care. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of an online health community (OHC) intervention for older people with frailty aimed at facilitating multidisciplinary communication. MethodsThe design was a controlled before-after study with 12 months follow-up in 11 family practices in the eastern part of the Netherlands. Participants consisted of frail older people living in the community requiring multidisciplinary (long-term) care. The intervention used was the health and welfare portal (ZWIP): an OHC for frail elderly patients, their informal caregivers and professionals. ZWIP contains a secure messaging system supplemented by a shared electronic health record. Primary outcomes were scores on the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living scale (IADL), mental health, and social activity limitations. ResultsThere were 290 patients in the intervention group and 392 in the control group. Of these, 76/290 (26.2%) in the intervention group actively used ZWIP. After 12 months follow-up, we observed no significant improvement on primary patient outcomes. ADL improved in the intervention group with a standardized score of 0.21 (P=.27); IADL improved with 0.50 points, P=.64. ConclusionsOnly a small percentage of frail elderly people in the study intensively used ZWIP, our newly developed and innovative eHealth tool. The use of this OHC did not significantly improve patient outcomes. This was most likely due to the limited use of the OHC, and a relatively short follow-up time. Increasing actual use of eHealth intervention seems a precondition for large-scale evaluation, and earlier adoption before frailty develops may improve later use and effectiveness of ZWIP.http://www.jmir.org/2014/6/e156/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Makai, Peter
Perry, Marieke
Robben, Sarah HM
Schers, Henk J
Heinen, Maud M
Olde Rikkert, Marcel GM
Melis, René F
spellingShingle Makai, Peter
Perry, Marieke
Robben, Sarah HM
Schers, Henk J
Heinen, Maud M
Olde Rikkert, Marcel GM
Melis, René F
Evaluation of an eHealth Intervention in Chronic Care for Frail Older People: Why Adherence is the First Target
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Makai, Peter
Perry, Marieke
Robben, Sarah HM
Schers, Henk J
Heinen, Maud M
Olde Rikkert, Marcel GM
Melis, René F
author_sort Makai, Peter
title Evaluation of an eHealth Intervention in Chronic Care for Frail Older People: Why Adherence is the First Target
title_short Evaluation of an eHealth Intervention in Chronic Care for Frail Older People: Why Adherence is the First Target
title_full Evaluation of an eHealth Intervention in Chronic Care for Frail Older People: Why Adherence is the First Target
title_fullStr Evaluation of an eHealth Intervention in Chronic Care for Frail Older People: Why Adherence is the First Target
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of an eHealth Intervention in Chronic Care for Frail Older People: Why Adherence is the First Target
title_sort evaluation of an ehealth intervention in chronic care for frail older people: why adherence is the first target
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2014-06-01
description BackgroundOlder people suffering from frailty often receive fragmented chronic care from multiple professionals. According to the literature, there is an urgent need for coordination of care. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of an online health community (OHC) intervention for older people with frailty aimed at facilitating multidisciplinary communication. MethodsThe design was a controlled before-after study with 12 months follow-up in 11 family practices in the eastern part of the Netherlands. Participants consisted of frail older people living in the community requiring multidisciplinary (long-term) care. The intervention used was the health and welfare portal (ZWIP): an OHC for frail elderly patients, their informal caregivers and professionals. ZWIP contains a secure messaging system supplemented by a shared electronic health record. Primary outcomes were scores on the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living scale (IADL), mental health, and social activity limitations. ResultsThere were 290 patients in the intervention group and 392 in the control group. Of these, 76/290 (26.2%) in the intervention group actively used ZWIP. After 12 months follow-up, we observed no significant improvement on primary patient outcomes. ADL improved in the intervention group with a standardized score of 0.21 (P=.27); IADL improved with 0.50 points, P=.64. ConclusionsOnly a small percentage of frail elderly people in the study intensively used ZWIP, our newly developed and innovative eHealth tool. The use of this OHC did not significantly improve patient outcomes. This was most likely due to the limited use of the OHC, and a relatively short follow-up time. Increasing actual use of eHealth intervention seems a precondition for large-scale evaluation, and earlier adoption before frailty develops may improve later use and effectiveness of ZWIP.
url http://www.jmir.org/2014/6/e156/
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