Demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.

PURPOSE:A wealth of mobile applications are designed to support users in their drug intake. When developing software for patients, it is important to understand the differences between individuals who have, who will or who might never adopt mobile interventions. This study analyzes demographic and h...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stefan Becker, Christopher Brandl, Sven Meister, Eckhard Nagel, Talya Miron-Shatz, Anna Mitchell, Andreas Kribben, Urs-Vito Albrecht, Alexander Mertens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4309600?pdf=render
id doaj-4a22bf401980425ca82a97f707887810
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4a22bf401980425ca82a97f7078878102020-11-25T01:33:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01101e011698010.1371/journal.pone.0116980Demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.Stefan BeckerChristopher BrandlSven MeisterEckhard NagelTalya Miron-ShatzAnna MitchellAndreas KribbenUrs-Vito AlbrechtAlexander MertensPURPOSE:A wealth of mobile applications are designed to support users in their drug intake. When developing software for patients, it is important to understand the differences between individuals who have, who will or who might never adopt mobile interventions. This study analyzes demographic and health-related factors associated with real-life "longer usage" and the "usage-intensity per day" of the mobile application "Medication Plan". METHODS:Between 2010-2012, the mobile application "Medication Plan" could be downloaded free of charge from the Apple-App-Store. It was aimed at supporting the regular and correct intake of medication. Demographic and health-related data were collected via an online questionnaire. This study analyzed captured data. RESULTS:App-related activities of 1799 users (1708 complete data sets) were recorded. 69% (1183/1708) applied "Medication Plan" for more than a day. 74% were male (872/1183), the median age 45 years. Variance analysis showed a significant effect of the users' age with respect to duration of usage (p = 0.025). While the mean duration of use was only 23.3 days for users younger than 21 years, for older users, there was a substantial increase over all age cohorts up to users of 60 years and above (103.9 days). Sex and educational status had no effect. "Daily usage intensity" was directly associated with an increasing number of prescribed medications and increased from an average of 1.87 uses per day and 1 drug per day to on average 3.71 uses per day for users stating to be taking more than 7 different drugs a day (p<0.001). Demographic predictors (sex, age and educational attainment) did not affect usage intensity. CONCLUSION:Users aged 60+ as well as those with complicated therapeutic drug regimens relied on the service we provided for more than three months on average. Mobile applications may be a promising approach to support the treatment of patients with chronic conditions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4309600?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefan Becker
Christopher Brandl
Sven Meister
Eckhard Nagel
Talya Miron-Shatz
Anna Mitchell
Andreas Kribben
Urs-Vito Albrecht
Alexander Mertens
spellingShingle Stefan Becker
Christopher Brandl
Sven Meister
Eckhard Nagel
Talya Miron-Shatz
Anna Mitchell
Andreas Kribben
Urs-Vito Albrecht
Alexander Mertens
Demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Stefan Becker
Christopher Brandl
Sven Meister
Eckhard Nagel
Talya Miron-Shatz
Anna Mitchell
Andreas Kribben
Urs-Vito Albrecht
Alexander Mertens
author_sort Stefan Becker
title Demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.
title_short Demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.
title_full Demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.
title_fullStr Demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.
title_full_unstemmed Demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.
title_sort demographic and health related data of users of a mobile application to support drug adherence is associated with usage duration and intensity.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description PURPOSE:A wealth of mobile applications are designed to support users in their drug intake. When developing software for patients, it is important to understand the differences between individuals who have, who will or who might never adopt mobile interventions. This study analyzes demographic and health-related factors associated with real-life "longer usage" and the "usage-intensity per day" of the mobile application "Medication Plan". METHODS:Between 2010-2012, the mobile application "Medication Plan" could be downloaded free of charge from the Apple-App-Store. It was aimed at supporting the regular and correct intake of medication. Demographic and health-related data were collected via an online questionnaire. This study analyzed captured data. RESULTS:App-related activities of 1799 users (1708 complete data sets) were recorded. 69% (1183/1708) applied "Medication Plan" for more than a day. 74% were male (872/1183), the median age 45 years. Variance analysis showed a significant effect of the users' age with respect to duration of usage (p = 0.025). While the mean duration of use was only 23.3 days for users younger than 21 years, for older users, there was a substantial increase over all age cohorts up to users of 60 years and above (103.9 days). Sex and educational status had no effect. "Daily usage intensity" was directly associated with an increasing number of prescribed medications and increased from an average of 1.87 uses per day and 1 drug per day to on average 3.71 uses per day for users stating to be taking more than 7 different drugs a day (p<0.001). Demographic predictors (sex, age and educational attainment) did not affect usage intensity. CONCLUSION:Users aged 60+ as well as those with complicated therapeutic drug regimens relied on the service we provided for more than three months on average. Mobile applications may be a promising approach to support the treatment of patients with chronic conditions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4309600?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT stefanbecker demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
AT christopherbrandl demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
AT svenmeister demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
AT eckhardnagel demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
AT talyamironshatz demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
AT annamitchell demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
AT andreaskribben demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
AT ursvitoalbrecht demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
AT alexandermertens demographicandhealthrelateddataofusersofamobileapplicationtosupportdrugadherenceisassociatedwithusagedurationandintensity
_version_ 1725078131209928704