1. New-Onset Diabetes Educator to Educate Children and Their Caregivers About Diabetes at the Time of Diagnosis: Usability Study
- Author
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Bernier, Angelina, Fedele, David, Guo, Yi, Chavez, Sarah, Smith, Megan D, Warnick, Jennifer, Lieberman, Leora, and Modave, François
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,pediatrics ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Biomedical Engineering ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Health Informatics ,Disease ,Health intervention ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,information technology ,Health Information Management ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,Diabetes mellitus ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,mHealth ,Original Paper ,Type 1 diabetes ,business.industry ,diabetes education ,Usability ,medicine.disease ,Computer Science Applications ,Physical therapy ,business - Abstract
Background: Diabetes self-management education is essential at the time of diagnosis. We developed the New-Onset Diabetes Educator (NODE), an animation-based educational web application for type 1 diabetes mellitus patients. Objective: Our hypothesis is that NODE is a feasible, effective and user-friendly intervention in improving diabetes self-management education delivery to child/caregiver-dyads at the time of diagnosis. Methods: We used a pragmatic parallel randomized trial design. Dyads were recruited within 48 hours of diagnosis and randomized into a NODE-enhanced diabetes self-management education or a standard diabetes self-management education group. Dyads randomized in the NODE group received the intervention on an iPad before receiving the standard diabetes self-management education with a nurse educator. The Diabetes Knowledge Test 2 assessed disease-specific knowledge pre- and postintervention in both groups, and was compared using t tests. Usability of the NODE mobile health intervention was assessed in the NODE group. Results: We recruited 16 dyads (mean child age 10.75, SD 3.44). Mean Diabetes Knowledge Test 2 scores were 14.25 (SD 4.17) and 18.13 (SD 2.17) pre- and postintervention in the NODE group, and 15.50 (SD 2.67) and 17.38 (SD 2.26) in the standard diabetes self-management education group. The effect size was medium (Δ=0.56). Usability ratings of NODE were excellent. Conclusions: NODE is a feasible mobile health strategy for type 1 diabetes education. It has the potential to be an effective and scalable tool to enhance diabetes self-management education at time of diagnosis, and consequently, could lead to improved long-term clinical outcomes for patients living with the disease.
- Published
- 2018
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