학술논문

Smartphone App for monitoring Asthma in children and adolescents.
Document Type
Article
Source
Quality of Life Research. Nov2021, Vol. 30 Issue 11, p3127-3144. 18p. 3 Color Photographs, 2 Diagrams, 2 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*ASTHMA in children
*TEENAGERS
*ASTHMATICS
*SMARTPHONES
*PARENTS
Language
ISSN
0962-9343
Abstract
Purpose: The asthma stepwise treatment approach recommended is based on monitoring patients' symptoms. The Asthma Research in Children and Adolescents (ARCA) cohort was created to provide evidence about the evolution of persistent asthma. This manuscript describes the development of an electronic health tool, comprising a mobile health application for patients with asthma and its associated online platform for pediatricians to monitor them. Methods: The development process followed 7 phases: the first 5 (Conceptualization, Preparation, Assessment scheduling, Image and user interface, and Technical development) defined and designed the tool, followed by a testing phase (functionality assessment and pilot test with ARCA patients), and a last phase which evaluated usability. Since the target population was aged 6–16 years, three versions were designed within the same smartphone application: parents/proxy, children, and adolescents. The online platform for pediatricians provides real-time information from the application: patients' responses over time with color-coded charts (red/amber/green, as in traffic lights). Results: The pilot test through semi-structured phone interviews of the first 50 participants included in the ARCA study (n = 53) detected their misunderstandings. Pediatricians were trained to emphasize that the application is free of charge and requires monthly answers. Median of the System Usability Scale scores (n = 85), ranging 0 (negative)–100 (positive), was > 93 in the three age versions of the application. Conclusions: Technology has the capability of transforming the use of patient-reported outcomes. Describing all the development phases of a mobile health application for monitoring children and adolescents with asthma may increase the knowledge on how to design applications for young patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]