Engagement, Retention, and Acceptability in a Digital Health Program for Atopic Dermatitis: Prospective Interventional Study

BackgroundPatients with atopic dermatitis can experience chronic eczema with pruritus, skin pain, sleep problems, anxiety, and other problems that reduce their quality of life (QoL). Current treatments aim to improve these symptoms and reduce inflammation, but poor treatment adherence and disease un...

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Published in:JMIR Formative Research
Main Authors: Sigrídur Lára Gudmundsdóttir, Tommaso Ballarini, María L Ámundadóttir, Judit Mészáros, Jenna Huld Eysteinsdottir, Ragna H Thorleifsdottir, Sigrídur K Hrafnkelsdóttir, Halla Helgadottir, Saemundur Oddsson, Jonathan I Silverberg
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2023
Subjects:
R
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2196/41227
https://doaj.org/article/1b8138d37b684b6db2f2bfec26f93ef1
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:1b8138d37b684b6db2f2bfec26f93ef1 2023-10-01T03:57:00+02:00 Engagement, Retention, and Acceptability in a Digital Health Program for Atopic Dermatitis: Prospective Interventional Study Sigrídur Lára Gudmundsdóttir Tommaso Ballarini María L Ámundadóttir Judit Mészáros Jenna Huld Eysteinsdottir Ragna H Thorleifsdottir Sigrídur K Hrafnkelsdóttir Halla Helgadottir Saemundur Oddsson Jonathan I Silverberg 2023-06-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.2196/41227 https://doaj.org/article/1b8138d37b684b6db2f2bfec26f93ef1 EN eng JMIR Publications https://formative.jmir.org/2023/1/e41227 https://doaj.org/toc/2561-326X 2561-326X doi:10.2196/41227 https://doaj.org/article/1b8138d37b684b6db2f2bfec26f93ef1 JMIR Formative Research, Vol 7, p e41227 (2023) Medicine R article 2023 ftdoajarticles https://doi.org/10.2196/41227 2023-09-03T00:53:10Z BackgroundPatients with atopic dermatitis can experience chronic eczema with pruritus, skin pain, sleep problems, anxiety, and other problems that reduce their quality of life (QoL). Current treatments aim to improve these symptoms and reduce inflammation, but poor treatment adherence and disease understanding are key concerns in the long-term management of atopic dermatitis. Digital therapeutics can help with these and support patients toward a healthier lifestyle to improve their overall QoL. ObjectiveThe aim of the study is to test the feasibility of a digital health program tailored for atopic dermatitis through program engagement, retention, and acceptability. MethodsAdults with atopic dermatitis were recruited in Iceland for a 6-week digital health program delivered through a smartphone app. Key components of the digital program were disease and trigger education; medication reminders; patient-reported outcomes (PROs) on energy levels, stress levels, and quality of sleep (referred to as QoL PROs); atopic dermatitis symptom PROs; guided meditation; and healthy lifestyle coaching. The primary outcome was program feasibility, as assessed by in-app retention and engagement. User satisfaction was assessed by the mHealth (ie, mobile health) App Usability Questionnaire (MAUQ). ResultsA total of 21 patients were recruited (17 female, mean age 31 years), 20 (95%) completed the program. On average, users were active in the app 6.5 days per week and completed 8.2 missions per day. The education content, medication reminders, and PROs had high user engagement and retention; all users who were exposed to the QoL PROs (n=17) interacted with these, and 20/21 (95%) users were continuously engaged with the education missions, medication missions, and symptom PROs. Continued engagement with the step counter and mind missions among exposed users was lower (17/21 and 13/20 participants, respectively). Medication reminder and education task completion remained high over time (at least 18/20, 90%), but weekly interactions ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles JMIR Formative Research 7 e41227
institution Open Polar
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
op_collection_id ftdoajarticles
language English
topic Medicine
R
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Sigrídur Lára Gudmundsdóttir
Tommaso Ballarini
María L Ámundadóttir
Judit Mészáros
Jenna Huld Eysteinsdottir
Ragna H Thorleifsdottir
Sigrídur K Hrafnkelsdóttir
Halla Helgadottir
Saemundur Oddsson
Jonathan I Silverberg
Engagement, Retention, and Acceptability in a Digital Health Program for Atopic Dermatitis: Prospective Interventional Study
topic_facet Medicine
R
description BackgroundPatients with atopic dermatitis can experience chronic eczema with pruritus, skin pain, sleep problems, anxiety, and other problems that reduce their quality of life (QoL). Current treatments aim to improve these symptoms and reduce inflammation, but poor treatment adherence and disease understanding are key concerns in the long-term management of atopic dermatitis. Digital therapeutics can help with these and support patients toward a healthier lifestyle to improve their overall QoL. ObjectiveThe aim of the study is to test the feasibility of a digital health program tailored for atopic dermatitis through program engagement, retention, and acceptability. MethodsAdults with atopic dermatitis were recruited in Iceland for a 6-week digital health program delivered through a smartphone app. Key components of the digital program were disease and trigger education; medication reminders; patient-reported outcomes (PROs) on energy levels, stress levels, and quality of sleep (referred to as QoL PROs); atopic dermatitis symptom PROs; guided meditation; and healthy lifestyle coaching. The primary outcome was program feasibility, as assessed by in-app retention and engagement. User satisfaction was assessed by the mHealth (ie, mobile health) App Usability Questionnaire (MAUQ). ResultsA total of 21 patients were recruited (17 female, mean age 31 years), 20 (95%) completed the program. On average, users were active in the app 6.5 days per week and completed 8.2 missions per day. The education content, medication reminders, and PROs had high user engagement and retention; all users who were exposed to the QoL PROs (n=17) interacted with these, and 20/21 (95%) users were continuously engaged with the education missions, medication missions, and symptom PROs. Continued engagement with the step counter and mind missions among exposed users was lower (17/21 and 13/20 participants, respectively). Medication reminder and education task completion remained high over time (at least 18/20, 90%), but weekly interactions ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Sigrídur Lára Gudmundsdóttir
Tommaso Ballarini
María L Ámundadóttir
Judit Mészáros
Jenna Huld Eysteinsdottir
Ragna H Thorleifsdottir
Sigrídur K Hrafnkelsdóttir
Halla Helgadottir
Saemundur Oddsson
Jonathan I Silverberg
author_facet Sigrídur Lára Gudmundsdóttir
Tommaso Ballarini
María L Ámundadóttir
Judit Mészáros
Jenna Huld Eysteinsdottir
Ragna H Thorleifsdottir
Sigrídur K Hrafnkelsdóttir
Halla Helgadottir
Saemundur Oddsson
Jonathan I Silverberg
author_sort Sigrídur Lára Gudmundsdóttir
title Engagement, Retention, and Acceptability in a Digital Health Program for Atopic Dermatitis: Prospective Interventional Study
title_short Engagement, Retention, and Acceptability in a Digital Health Program for Atopic Dermatitis: Prospective Interventional Study
title_full Engagement, Retention, and Acceptability in a Digital Health Program for Atopic Dermatitis: Prospective Interventional Study
title_fullStr Engagement, Retention, and Acceptability in a Digital Health Program for Atopic Dermatitis: Prospective Interventional Study
title_full_unstemmed Engagement, Retention, and Acceptability in a Digital Health Program for Atopic Dermatitis: Prospective Interventional Study
title_sort engagement, retention, and acceptability in a digital health program for atopic dermatitis: prospective interventional study
publisher JMIR Publications
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.2196/41227
https://doaj.org/article/1b8138d37b684b6db2f2bfec26f93ef1
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source JMIR Formative Research, Vol 7, p e41227 (2023)
op_relation https://formative.jmir.org/2023/1/e41227
https://doaj.org/toc/2561-326X
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doi:10.2196/41227
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