Value of Engagement in Digital Health Technology Research: Evidence Across 6 Unique Cohort Studies

Wearable digital health technologies and mobile apps (personal digital health technologies [DHTs]) hold great promise for transforming health research and care. However, engagement in personal DHT research is poor. The objective of this paper is to describe how participant engagement techniques and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medical Internet research 2024-09, Vol.26 (22), p.e57827
Hauptverfasser: Goodday, Sarah M, Karlin, Emma, Brooks, Alexa, Chapman, Carol, Harry, Christiana, Lugo, Nelly, Peabody, Shannon, Rangwala, Shazia, Swanson, Ella, Tempero, Jonell, Yang, Robin, Karlin, Daniel R, Rabinowicz, Ron, Malkin, David, Travis, Simon, Walsh, Alissa, Hirten, Robert P, Sands, Bruce E, Bettegowda, Chetan, Holdhoff, Matthias, Wollett, Jessica, Szajna, Kelly, Dirmeyer, Kallan, Dodd, Anna, Hutchinson, Shawn, Ramotar, Stephanie, Grant, Robert C, Boch, Adrien, Wildman, Mackenzie, Friend, Stephen H
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Wearable digital health technologies and mobile apps (personal digital health technologies [DHTs]) hold great promise for transforming health research and care. However, engagement in personal DHT research is poor. The objective of this paper is to describe how participant engagement techniques and different study designs affect participant adherence, retention, and overall engagement in research involving personal DHTs. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of engagement factors are reported across 6 unique personal DHT research studies that adopted aspects of a participant-centric design. Study populations included (1) frontline health care workers; (2) a conception, pregnant, and postpartum population; (3) individuals with Crohn disease; (4) individuals with pancreatic cancer; (5) individuals with central nervous system tumors; and (6) families with a Li-Fraumeni syndrome affected member. All included studies involved the use of a study smartphone app that collected both daily and intermittent passive and active tasks, as well as using multiple wearable devices including smartwatches, smart rings, and smart scales. All studies included a variety of participant-centric engagement strategies centered on working with participants as co-designers and regular check-in phone calls to provide support over study participation. Overall retention, probability of staying in the study, and median adherence to study activities are reported. The median proportion of participants retained in the study across the 6 studies was 77.2% (IQR 72.6%-88%). The probability of staying in the study stayed above 80% for all studies during the first month of study participation and stayed above 50% for the entire active study period across all studies. Median adherence to study activities varied by study population. Severely ill cancer populations and postpartum mothers showed the lowest adherence to personal DHT research tasks, largely the result of physical, mental, and situational barriers. Except for the cancer and postpartum populations, median adherences for the Oura smart ring, Garmin, and Apple smartwatches were over 80% and 90%, respectively. Median adherence to the scheduled check-in calls was high across all but one cohort (50%, IQR 20%-75%: low-engagement cohort). Median adherence to study-related activities in this low-engagement cohort was lower than in all other included studies. Participant-centric engagement strategies aid in participant retention and maintain goo
ISSN:1438-8871
1439-4456
1438-8871
DOI:10.2196/57827