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A mobile health infrastructure to support underserved patients with chronic disease

Abstract Background Chronic diseases are the global leading cause of death, but the US health system is poorly designed to support patients with chronic disease. Underserved patients report high rates of cell phone use and interest in using mobile technology for health care. A mobile health infrastr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Healthcare : the journal of delivery science and innovation 2014-03, Vol.2 (1), p.63-68
Main Authors: Moore, Susan L, Fischer, Henry H, Steele, Andrew W, Joshua Durfee, M, Ginosar, David, Rice-Peterson, Cecilia, Berschling, Jeffrey D, Davidson, Arthur J
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Abstract Background Chronic diseases are the global leading cause of death, but the US health system is poorly designed to support patients with chronic disease. Underserved patients report high rates of cell phone use and interest in using mobile technology for health care. A mobile health infrastructure may help transform health care delivery for underserved patients with chronic disease. Problem This study assessed the feasibility of integrating mobile health infrastructure with clinical information systems and the electronic medical record (EMR) to support patients with chronic disease through automated, bidirectional text messaging. Goals Three priority areas of chronic disease management were targeted. Existing self-management support was expanded, and new support for laboratory test scheduling and medication management was created. Strategy Adult patients ( n =135) with diabetes selected preferred content and scheduling for self-management message prompts. Outreach messages were sent to patients overdue for laboratory tests and medications. Manual review of pharmacy and laboratory outreach data was conducted for quality assurance. Focus groups were held to solicit patient perspectives. Results Patients sent over 6500 response messages with response rates of 53.7% (blood sugar), 48.8% (step counts), and 31.9% (blood pressure). Laboratory data integration was achieved, but pharmacy data gaps required ongoing manual review. Focus group participants reported improved self-management and information awareness. Implications HIT was used to address dependency on visit-bound disease management in a novel, low-cost way. Use of a mobile health infrastructure was feasible. Text messaging solutions may mitigate barriers to access and enhance support for patients with chronic disease.
ISSN:2213-0764
2213-0772
DOI:10.1016/j.hjdsi.2013.12.016