An eHealth Intervention for Patients in Rural Areas: Preliminary Findings From a Pilot Feasibility Study

BackgroundeHealth facilitation of chronic disease management has potential to increase engagement and effectiveness and extend access to care in rural areas. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility and acceptability of an eHealth sy...

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Main Authors: Schrader, Geoffrey, Bidargaddi, Niranjan, Harris, Melanie, Newman, Lareen, Lynn, Sarah, Peterson, Leigh, Battersby, Malcolm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2014-06-01
Series:JMIR Research Protocols
Online Access:http://www.researchprotocols.org/2014/2/e27/
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spelling doaj-c0353174b5914a29a82c95ee306dbd952021-05-03T04:35:14ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Research Protocols1929-07482014-06-0132e2710.2196/resprot.2861An eHealth Intervention for Patients in Rural Areas: Preliminary Findings From a Pilot Feasibility StudySchrader, GeoffreyBidargaddi, NiranjanHarris, MelanieNewman, LareenLynn, SarahPeterson, LeighBattersby, Malcolm BackgroundeHealth facilitation of chronic disease management has potential to increase engagement and effectiveness and extend access to care in rural areas. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility and acceptability of an eHealth system for the management of chronic conditions in a rural setting. MethodsWe developed an online management program which incorporated content from the Flinders Chronic Condition Management Program (Flinders Program) and used an existing software platform (goACT), which is accessible by patients and health care workers using either Web-enabled mobile phone or Internet, enabling communication between patients and clinicians. We analyzed the impact of this eHealth system using qualitative and simple quantitative methods. ResultsThe eHealth system was piloted with 8 recently hospitalized patients from rural areas, average age 63 (SD 9) years, each with an average of 5 chronic conditions and high level of psychological distress with an average K10 score of 32.20 (SD 5.81). Study participants interacted with the eHealth system. The average number of logins to the eHealth system by the study participants was 26.4 (SD 23.5) over 29 weeks. The login activity was higher early in the week. ConclusionsThe pilot demonstrated the feasibility of implementing and delivering a chronic disease management program using a Web-based patient-clinician application. A qualitative analysis revealed burden of illness and low levels of information technology literacy as barriers to patient engagement.http://www.researchprotocols.org/2014/2/e27/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Schrader, Geoffrey
Bidargaddi, Niranjan
Harris, Melanie
Newman, Lareen
Lynn, Sarah
Peterson, Leigh
Battersby, Malcolm
spellingShingle Schrader, Geoffrey
Bidargaddi, Niranjan
Harris, Melanie
Newman, Lareen
Lynn, Sarah
Peterson, Leigh
Battersby, Malcolm
An eHealth Intervention for Patients in Rural Areas: Preliminary Findings From a Pilot Feasibility Study
JMIR Research Protocols
author_facet Schrader, Geoffrey
Bidargaddi, Niranjan
Harris, Melanie
Newman, Lareen
Lynn, Sarah
Peterson, Leigh
Battersby, Malcolm
author_sort Schrader, Geoffrey
title An eHealth Intervention for Patients in Rural Areas: Preliminary Findings From a Pilot Feasibility Study
title_short An eHealth Intervention for Patients in Rural Areas: Preliminary Findings From a Pilot Feasibility Study
title_full An eHealth Intervention for Patients in Rural Areas: Preliminary Findings From a Pilot Feasibility Study
title_fullStr An eHealth Intervention for Patients in Rural Areas: Preliminary Findings From a Pilot Feasibility Study
title_full_unstemmed An eHealth Intervention for Patients in Rural Areas: Preliminary Findings From a Pilot Feasibility Study
title_sort ehealth intervention for patients in rural areas: preliminary findings from a pilot feasibility study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Research Protocols
issn 1929-0748
publishDate 2014-06-01
description BackgroundeHealth facilitation of chronic disease management has potential to increase engagement and effectiveness and extend access to care in rural areas. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility and acceptability of an eHealth system for the management of chronic conditions in a rural setting. MethodsWe developed an online management program which incorporated content from the Flinders Chronic Condition Management Program (Flinders Program) and used an existing software platform (goACT), which is accessible by patients and health care workers using either Web-enabled mobile phone or Internet, enabling communication between patients and clinicians. We analyzed the impact of this eHealth system using qualitative and simple quantitative methods. ResultsThe eHealth system was piloted with 8 recently hospitalized patients from rural areas, average age 63 (SD 9) years, each with an average of 5 chronic conditions and high level of psychological distress with an average K10 score of 32.20 (SD 5.81). Study participants interacted with the eHealth system. The average number of logins to the eHealth system by the study participants was 26.4 (SD 23.5) over 29 weeks. The login activity was higher early in the week. ConclusionsThe pilot demonstrated the feasibility of implementing and delivering a chronic disease management program using a Web-based patient-clinician application. A qualitative analysis revealed burden of illness and low levels of information technology literacy as barriers to patient engagement.
url http://www.researchprotocols.org/2014/2/e27/
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