Assessing the Efficacy of an Educational Smartphone or Tablet App With Subdivided and Interactive Content to Increase Patients' Medical Knowledge: Randomized Controlled Trial

Modern health care focuses on shared decision making (SDM) because of its positive effects on patient satisfaction, therapy compliance, and outcomes. Patients' knowledge about their illness and available treatment options, gained through medical education, is one of the key drivers for SDM. Cur...

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Veröffentlicht in:JMIR mHealth and uHealth 2018-12, Vol.6 (12), p.e10742-e10742
Hauptverfasser: Timmers, Thomas, Janssen, Loes, Pronk, Yvette, van der Zwaard, Babette C, Koëter, Sander, van Oostveen, Dirk, de Boer, Stefan, Kremers, Keetie, Rutten, Sebastiaan, Das, Dirk, van Geenen, Rutger Ci, Koenraadt, Koen Lm, Kusters, Rob, van der Weegen, Walter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Modern health care focuses on shared decision making (SDM) because of its positive effects on patient satisfaction, therapy compliance, and outcomes. Patients' knowledge about their illness and available treatment options, gained through medical education, is one of the key drivers for SDM. Current patient education relies heavily on medical consultation and is known to be ineffective. This study aimed to determine whether providing patients with information in a subdivided, categorized, and interactive manner via an educational app for smartphone or tablet might increase the knowledge of their illness. A surgeon-blinded randomized controlled trial was conducted with 213 patients who were referred to 1 of the 6 Dutch hospitals by their general practitioner owing to knee complaints that were indicative of knee osteoarthritis. An interactive app that, in addition to standard care, actively sends informative and pertinent content to patients about their illness on a daily basis by means of push notifications in the week before their consultation. The primary outcome was the level of perceived and actual knowledge that patients had about their knee complaints and the relevant treatment options after the intervention. In total, 122 patients were enrolled in the control group and 91 in the intervention group. After the intervention, the level of actual knowledge (measured on a 0-36 scale) was 52% higher in the app group (26.4 vs 17.4, P
ISSN:2291-5222
2291-5222
DOI:10.2196/10742