29 results on '"McCloughan, Lucy"'
Search Results
2. Effectiveness of telemonitoring integrated into existing clinical services on hospital admission for exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: researcher blind, multicentre, randomised controlled trial
- Author
-
Pinnock, Hilary, Hanley, Janet, McCloughan, Lucy, Todd, Allison, Krishan, Ashma, Lewis, Stephanie, Stoddart, Andrew, van der Pol, Marjon, MacNee, William, Sheikh, Aziz, Pagliari, Claudia, and McKinstry, Brian
- Published
- 2013
3. Sustained User Engagement in Health Information Technology: The Long Road from Implementation to System Optimization of Computerized Physician Order Entry and Clinical Decision Support Systems for Prescribing in Hospitals in England
- Author
-
Cresswell, Kathrin M., Lee, Lisa, Mozaffar, Hajar, Williams, Robin, Sheikh, Aziz, Robertson, Ann, Schofield, Jill, Coleman, Jamie, Slee, Ann, Bates, David, Morrison, Zoe, Girling, Alan, Chuter, Antony, Blake, Laurence, Avery, Anthony, Lilford, Richard, Slight, Sarah, Schofield, Behnaz, Shah, Sonal, Salema, Ndeshi, Watson, Sam, and McCloughan, Lucy
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Involving patients in clinical research: the Telescot Patient Panel
- Author
-
Fairbrother, Peter, McCloughan, Lucy, Adam, Geraldine, Brand, Richard, Brown, Cecil, Watson, Mary, Cotter, Nicola, Mackellaig, Juliet, and McKinstry, Brian
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Correction to: Promoting healthy teenage behaviour across three European countries through the use of a novel smartphone technology platform, PEGASO fit for future: study protocol of a quasi-experimental, controlled, multi-Centre trial
- Author
-
Puigdomenech, Elisa, Martin, Anne, Lang, Alexandra, Adorni, Fulvio, Gomez, Santiago Felipe, McKinstry, Brian, Prinelli, Federica, Condon, Laura, Rashid, Rajeeb, Caon, Maurizio, Atkinson, Sarah, Lafortuna, Claudio L., Ciociola, Valentina, Hanley, Janet, McCloughan, Lucy, Castell, Conxa, and Espallargues, Mireia
- Subjects
Europe ,Male ,Adolescent ,Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Adolescent Behavior ,Health Behavior ,Correction ,Humans ,Female ,Health Promotion ,Smartphone ,Mobile Applications - Abstract
Behaviour change interventions targeting physical activity, diet, sleep and sedentary behaviour of teenagers show promise when delivered through smartphones. However, to date there is no evidence of effectiveness of multicomponent smartphone-based interventions. Utilising a user-centred design approach, we developed a theory-based, multi-dimensional system, PEGASO Fit For Future (PEGASO F4F), which exploits sophisticated game mechanics involving smartphone applications, a smartphone game and activity sensors to motivate teenagers to take an active role in adopting and maintaining a healthy lifestyle. This paper describes the study protocol to assess the feasibility, usability and effectiveness (knowledge/awareness and behavioural change in lifestyle) of the PEGASO system.We are conducting a quasi-experimental controlled cluster trial in 4 sites in Spain, Italy, and UK (England, Scotland) over 6 months. We plan to recruit 525, in a 2:1 basis, teenagers aged 13-16 years from secondary schools. The intervention group is provided with the PEGASO system whereas the comparison group continues their usual educational routine. Outcomes include feasibility, acceptance, and usability of the PEGASO system as well as between and within group changes in motivation, self-reported diet, physical activity, sedentary and sleeping behaviour, anthropometric measures and knowledge about a healthy lifestyle.PEGASO F4F will provide evidence into the cross-cultural similarities and differences in the feasibility, acceptability and usability of a multi-dimensional smartphone based behaviour change intervention for teenagers. The study will explore facilitating factors, challenges and barriers of engaging teenagers to adapt and maintain a healthy lifestyle when using smartphone technology. Positive results from this ICT based multi component intervention may have significant implications both at clinical level, improving teenagers health and at public health level since it can present an influential tool against the development of chronic disease during adulthood.https://clinicaltrials.gov Registration number: NCT02930148, registered 4 October 2016.
- Published
- 2021
6. Evaluation of medium-term consequences of implementing commercial computerized physician order entry and clinical decision support prescribing systems in two ‘early adopter’ hospitals
- Author
-
Cresswell, Kathrin M, Bates, David W, Williams, Robin, Morrison, Zoe, Slee, Ann, Coleman, Jamie, Robertson, Ann, Sheikh, Aziz, Avery, Tony, Blake, Laurence, Chuter, Antony, Slight, Sarah P, Girling, Alan, Lee, Lisa, Lilford, Richard, McCloughan, Lucy, Mozaffar, Hajar, and Schofield, Jill
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Telemonitoring for chronic heart failure: the views of patients and healthcare professionals – a qualitative study
- Author
-
Fairbrother, Peter, Ure, Jenny, Hanley, Janet, McCloughan, Lucy, Denvir, Martin, Sheikh, Aziz, and McKinstry, Brian
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Supported Telemonitoring and Glycemic Control in People with Type 2 Diabetes: The Telescot Diabetes Pragmatic Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial
- Author
-
Wild, Sarah H., Hanley, Janet, Lewis, Stephanie C., McKnight, John A., McCloughan, Lucy B., Padfield, Paul L., Parker, Richard A., Paterson, Mary, Pinnock, Hilary, Sheikh, Aziz, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
Management ,Care and treatment ,Usage ,Research ,Health care industry ,Company business management ,Health care industry -- Management ,Family medicine -- Usage ,Type 2 diabetes -- Care and treatment ,Patient care -- Management ,Blood glucose -- Research - Abstract
Author(s): Sarah H. Wild 1,*, Janet Hanley 2, Stephanie C. Lewis 1, John A. McKnight 3,4, Lucy B. McCloughan 1, Paul L. Padfield 4, Richard A. Parker 1, Mary Paterson [...], Background Self-monitoring of blood glucose among people with type 2 diabetes not treated with insulin does not appear to be effective in improving glycemic control. We investigated whether health professional review of telemetrically transmitted self-monitored glucose results in improved glycemic control in people with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes. Methods and Findings We performed a randomized, parallel, investigator-blind controlled trial with centralized randomization in family practices in four regions of the United Kingdom among 321 people with type 2 diabetes and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) >58 mmol/mol. The supported telemonitoring intervention involved self-measurement and transmission to a secure website of twice-weekly morning and evening glucose for review by family practice clinicians who were not blinded to allocation group. The control group received usual care, with at least annual review and more frequent reviews for people with poor glycemic or blood pressure control. HbA1c assessed at 9 mo was the primary outcome. Intention-to-treat analyses were performed. 160 people were randomized to the intervention group and 161 to the usual care group between June 6, 2011, and July 19, 2013. HbA1c data at follow-up were available for 146 people in the intervention group and 139 people in the control group. The mean (SD) HbA1c at follow-up was 63.0 (15.5) mmol/mol in the intervention group and 67.8 (14.7) mmol/mol in the usual care group. For primary analysis, adjusted mean HbA1c was 5.60 mmol/mol / 0.51% lower (95% CI 2.38 to 8.81 mmol/mol/ 95% CI 0.22% to 0.81%, p = 0·0007). For secondary analyses, adjusted mean ambulatory systolic blood pressure was 3.06 mmHg lower (95% CI 0.56-5.56 mmHg, p = 0.017) and mean ambulatory diastolic blood pressure was 2.17 mmHg lower (95% CI 0.62-3.72, p = 0.006) among people in the intervention group when compared with usual care after adjustment for baseline differences and minimization strata. No significant differences were identified between groups in weight, treatment pattern, adherence to medication, or quality of life in secondary analyses. There were few adverse events and these were equally distributed between the intervention and control groups. In secondary analysis, there was a greater number of telephone calls between practice nurses and patients in the intervention compared with control group (rate ratio 7.50 (95% CI 4.45-12.65, p < 0.0001) but no other significant differences between groups in use of health services were identified between groups. Key limitations include potential lack of representativeness of trial participants, inability to blind participants and health professionals, and uncertainty about the mechanism, the duration of the effect, and the optimal length of the intervention. Conclusions Supported telemonitoring resulted in clinically important improvements in control of glycaemia in patients with type 2 diabetes in family practice. Current Controlled Trials, registration number ISRCTN71674628. Trial Registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN 71674628
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Supporting research in primary care: Are practice-based research networks the missing link?
- Author
-
Zwar, Nicholas A., Weller, David P., McCloughan, Lucy, and Traynor, Vanessa J.
- Subjects
Physicians (General practice) -- Management ,Community health services -- Management ,Company business management ,Health - Abstract
The practice-based research networks, which provide a setting and organizational structure to facilitate research in general practice, and to address questions relevant to general practitioners is reviewed. To establish practice-based research networks it is important not to go down an evolutionary blind alley and face extinction, but rather to create structures that would allow primary-care research to rapidly evolve and thrive in a competitive environment.
- Published
- 2006
10. Application of Mixed Effects Limits of Agreement in the Presence of Multiple Sources of Variability: Exemplar from the Comparison of Several Devices to Measure Respiratory Rate in COPD Patients.
- Author
-
Parker, Richard A., Weir, Christopher J., Rubio, Noah, Rabinovich, Roberto, Pinnock, Hilary, Hanley, Janet, McCloughan, Lucy, Drost, Ellen M., Mantoani, Leandro C., MacNee, William, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
OBSTRUCTIVE lung disease treatment ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung disease diagnosis ,PHYSICAL sciences ,BLAND-Altman plot ,PHOTOPLETHYSMOGRAPHY - Abstract
Introduction: The Bland-Altman limits of agreement method is widely used to assess how well the measurements produced by two raters, devices or systems agree with each other. However, mixed effects versions of the method which take into account multiple sources of variability are less well described in the literature. We address the practical challenges of applying mixed effects limits of agreement to the comparison of several devices to measure respiratory rate in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Methods: Respiratory rate was measured in 21 people with a range of severity of COPD. Participants were asked to perform eleven different activities representative of daily life during a laboratory-based standardised protocol of 57 minutes. A mixed effects limits of agreement method was used to assess the agreement of five commercially available monitors (Camera, Photoplethysmography (PPG), Impedance, Accelerometer, and Chest-band) with the current gold standard device for measuring respiratory rate. Results: Results produced using mixed effects limits of agreement were compared to results from a fixed effects method based on analysis of variance (ANOVA) and were found to be similar. The Accelerometer and Chest-band devices produced the narrowest limits of agreement (-8.63 to 4.27 and -9.99 to 6.80 respectively) with mean bias -2.18 and -1.60 breaths per minute. These devices also had the lowest within-participant and overall standard deviations (3.23 and 3.29 for Accelerometer and 4.17 and 4.28 for Chest-band respectively). Conclusions: The mixed effects limits of agreement analysis enabled us to answer the question of which devices showed the strongest agreement with the gold standard device with respect to measuring respiratory rates. In particular, the estimated within-participant and overall standard deviations of the differences, which are easily obtainable from the mixed effects model results, gave a clear indication that the Accelerometer and Chest-band devices performed best. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Effect of downsampling and compressive sensing on audio-based continuous cough monitoring.
- Author
-
Casaseca-de-la-Higuera, Pablo, Lesso, Paul, McKinstry, Brian, Pinnock, Hilary, Rabinovich, Roberto, McCloughan, Lucy, and Monge-Alvarez, Jesus
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Oximetry-supported self-management for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: mixed method feasibility pilot project.
- Author
-
MacNab, Michele, Siew Hwa Lee, McCloughan, Lucy, Hanley, Janet, McKinstry, Brian, Pinnock, Hilary, and Lee, Siew Hwa
- Subjects
OBSTRUCTIVE lung disease treatment ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,ANXIETY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MENTAL depression ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,OXIMETRY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,HEALTH self-care ,PILOT projects ,EVALUATION research ,HELPLINES ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Pulse oximetry could potentially contribute to self-monitoring. NHS Lothian's 'Light Touch' service provided COPD patients with a self-management plan based on symptoms and oximetry. The service was overseen (though not actively monitored) by respiratory-trained community teams who were contactable by a telephone helpline. We aimed to assess the feasibility, perceived utility and impact of the 'Light Touch' service.Methods: A before-and-after assessment of St George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and use of healthcare resources during the 6-month feasibility study compared to the previous corresponding 6-months. Paired semi-structured interviews with patients at baseline and 6-months, interviews with managers and a focus group of professionals explored perceptions of the service and self-management. Transcripts were coded, and analysed thematically.Results: We recruited 51 participants (mean age 69.7 years (SD 8.4); 21 (46%) male). 46 participants completed quantitative follow up (2 died, 2 were unwell, 1 refused). SGRQ: 21 (46%) participants improved by 4 or more (the minimum important difference); 12 (26%) deteriorated by 4 or more. HADS: more participants had normal scores for anxiety (65%) and depression (80%) at 6-months than at baseline (51 and 64%). More emergency therapy was prescribed during the study period compared to the previous year. Only 18 participants (39%) contacted the Light Touch Helpline during the 6-month study. Twenty patients provided a total of 36 interviews, 8 clinicians contributed to a focus group and 6 managers were interviewed. Patients considered that the oximetry readings heightened awareness of their condition and gave them confidence to make self-management decisions. Healthcare professionals valued oximetry as a tool for teaching people self-management skills, but were concerned that patients rarely contacted the teams for help or advice during the study.Conclusions: 'Light Touch' shows promise as a low-cost strategy for empowering patients' self-management skills and reducing reliance on clinical supervision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Mixed methods feasibility study for a trial of blood pressure telemonitoring for people who have had stroke/transient ischaemic attack (TIA).
- Author
-
Hanley, Janet, Fairbrother, Peter, Krishan, Ashma, McCloughan, Lucy, Padfield, Paul, Paterson, Mary, Pinnock, Hilary, Sheikh, Aziz, Sudlow, Cathie, Todd, Allison, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
HYPERTENSION ,STROKE ,ISCHEMIA ,PATIENT monitoring ,AMBULATORY blood pressure monitoring - Abstract
Background: Good blood pressure (BP) control reduces the risk of recurrence of stroke/transient ischaemic attack (TIA). Although there is strong evidence that BP telemonitoring helps achieve good control, none of the major trials have considered the effectiveness in stroke/TIA survivors. We therefore conducted a feasibility study for a trial of BP telemonitoring for stroke/TIA survivors with uncontrolled BP in primary care. Method: Phase 1 was a pilot trial involving 55 patients stratified by stroke/TIA randomised 3:1 to BP telemonitoring for 6 months or usual care. Phase 2 was a qualitative evaluation and comprised semi-structured interviews with 16 trial participants who received telemonitoring and 3 focus groups with 23 members of stroke support groups and 7 carers. Results: Overall, 125 patients (60 stroke patients, 65 TIA patients) were approached and 55 (44%) patients were randomised including 27 stroke patients and 28 TIA patients. Fifty-two participants (95%) attended the 6-month follow-up appointment, but one declined the second daytime ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) measurement resulting in a 93% completion rate for ABPM - the proposed primary outcome measure for a full trial. Adherence to telemonitoring was good; of the 40 participants who were telemonitoring, 38 continued to provide readings throughout the 6 months. There was a mean reduction of 10.1 mmHg in systolic ABPM in the telemonitoring group compared with 3.8 mmHg in the control group, which suggested the potential for a substantial effect from telemonitoring. Our qualitative analysis found that many stroke patients were concerned about their BP and telemonitoring increased their engagement, was easy, convenient and reassuring. Conclusions: A full-scale trial is feasible, likely to recruit well and have good rates of compliance and follow-up. Trial Registration: ISRCTN61528726 15/12/2011. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Telemonitoring for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a cost and cost-utility analysis of a randomised controlled trial.
- Author
-
Stoddart, Andrew, van der Pol, Marjon, Pinnock, Hilary, Hanley, Janet, McCloughan, Lucy, Todd, Allison, Krishan, Ashma, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
COST effectiveness ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,CLINICAL trials ,PATIENT monitoring equipment ,MEDICAL technology - Abstract
We compared the costs and cost-effectiveness of telemonitoring vs usual care for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). A total of 256 patients were randomised to either telemonitoring or usual care. In the telemonitoring arm, the touch-screen telemonitoring equipment transmitted data to clinical teams monitoring the patients. Total healthcare costs were estimated over a 12-month period from a National Health Service perspective and quality adjusted life year (QALYs) were estimated by the EQ-5D tool. Telemonitoring was not significantly more costly than usual care (mean difference per patient £2065.90 (P < 0.18). The increased costs were predominantly due to telemonitoring service costs and non-significantly higher secondary care costs. Telemonitoring for COPD was not cost-effective at a base case of £137,277 per QALY with only 15% probability of being cost-effective at the usual threshold of £30,000 per QALY. Although there was some statistical and methodological uncertainty in the measures used, telemonitoring was not cost-effective in the sensitivity analyses performed. It seems unlikely that a telemonitoring service of the kind that was trialled would be cost-effective in providing care for people with COPD. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The use of global positional satellite location in dementia: a feasibility study for a randomised controlled trial.
- Author
-
Milne, Heather, van der Pol, Marjon, McCloughan, Lucy, Hanley, Janet, Mead, Gillian, Starr, John, Sheikh, Aziz, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
DEMENTIA patients ,GLOBAL Positioning System ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CAREGIVERS ,ANXIETY ,COST effectiveness ,HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Background Getting lost outside is stressful for people with dementia and their caregivers and a leading cause of long-term institutionalisation. Although Global Positional Satellite (GPS) location has been promoted to facilitate safe walking, reduce caregivers' anxiety and enable people with dementia to remain at home, there is little high quality evidence about its acceptability, effectiveness or cost-effectiveness. This observational study explored the feasibility of recruiting and retaining participants, and the acceptability of outcome measures, to inform decisions about the feasibility of a randomised controlled trial (RCT). Methods People with dementia who had been provided with GPS devices by local social-care services and their caregivers were invited to participate in this study. We undertook interviews with people with dementia, caregivers and professionals to explore the perceived utility and challenges of GPS location, and assessed quality of life (QoL) and mental health. We piloted three methods of calculating resource use: caregiver diary; bi-monthly telephone questionnaires; and interrogation of health and social care records. We asked caregivers to estimate the time spent searching if participants became lost before and whilst using GPS. Results Twenty people were offered GPS locations services by social-care services during the 8-month recruitment period. Of these, 14 agreed to be referred to the research team, 12 of these participated and provided data. Eight people with dementia and 12 caregivers were interviewed. Most participants and professionals were very positive about using GPS. Only one person completed a diary. Resource use, anxiety and depression and QoL questionnaires were considered difficult and were therefore declined by some on follow-up. Social care records were time consuming to search and contained many omissions. Caregivers estimated that GPS reduced searching time although the accuracy of this was not objectively verified. Conclusions Our data suggest that a RCT will face challenges not least that widespread enthusiasm for GPS among social-care staff may challenge recruitment and its ready availability may risk contamination of controls. Potential primary outcomes of a RCT should not rely on caregivers' recall or questionnaire completion. Time spent searching (if this could be accurately captured) and days until long-term admission are potentially suitable outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The impact of supported telemetric monitoring in people with type 2 diabetes: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.
- Author
-
Wild, Sarah, Hanley, Janet, Lewis, Stephanie, McKnight, John, McCloughan, Lucy, Padfield, Paul, Paterson, Mary, Pinnock, Hilary, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
DIABETES ,DIABETES prevention ,BLOOD pressure measurement ,GLYCEMIC index ,GLYCOSYLATED hemoglobin ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,BLUETOOTH technology - Abstract
Background: Diabetes prevalence is increasing and current methods of management are unsustainable. Effective approaches to supporting self-management are required. The aim of this randomized controlled trial is to establish whether supported telemetric monitoring of glycemic control and blood pressure results in reductions in glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c; the primary outcome of a measure of long-term glycemic control) and secondary outcomes of blood pressure and weight among people with poorly controlled diabetes compared to a control group receiving usual care.Methods/design: Design: multi-center, randomized controlled trial with embedded qualitative study. Setting: primary care in Lothian, Kent, Glasgow and Borders regions in the UK. Participants: people with type 2 diabetes and confirmed HbA1c>7.5% (58 mmol/mol). Intervention/comparison: randomization to intervention or control groups will be performed by the Edinburgh Clinical Trials Unit. Participants in the intervention group will be shown how to use blood glucose and blood pressure monitors and weighing scales which use Bluetooth wireless technology to transmit readings via modem to a remote server. These participants will be asked to provide at least twice weekly measurements of morning and evening blood glucose and weekly measurements of weight and blood pressure. Measurements will be checked at least weekly by practice nurses who will contact the patients to adjust therapy according to guidelines and reinforce lifestyle advice. Participants in the control group will receive usual care. All participants will receive an individual education session. Follow-up: measurements will be performed at practices 9 months after randomization by research nurses blinded to allocation. The primary outcome measure is HbA1c and secondary outcomes measure are daytime systolic and diastolic blood pressure, weight and cost per quality-adjusted life year. Analysis: intention-to-treat analyses will be performed. The sample size of 320 participants allows for 20% drop-out and has 80% power at 5% significance to detect a 0.5% absolute (6 mmol/mol) fall in HbA1c in the intervention group. The qualitative study will explore the experiences of patients and professionals using the intervention.Trial Registration: Trial registration number ISRCTN71674628. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Continuity, but at what cost? The impact of telemonitoring COPD on continuities of care: a qualitative study.
- Author
-
Fairbrother, Peter, Pinnock, Hilary, Hanley, Janet, McCloughan, Lucy, Sheikh, Aziz, Pagliari, Claudia, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases patients ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENT monitoring ,QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Continuity of care is widely regarded as an important marker of quality in the management of patients with long-term conditions. New services that integrate telemonitoring into care pathways have potential to change aspects of continuity in both positive and negative ways. AIMS: A telemonitoring service for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) was introduced in Lothian, Scotland, in 2009. A qualitative study, nested within the TELESCOT COPD randomised control trial, was undertaken to explore the views of patients and professionals on telemonitoring. The perceived impact of telemonitoring on continuity of care was investigated as part of the research. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were undertaken with 38 patients (47% male, mean age 67.5 years). A maximum variation sample in relation to age, sex, socio-economic background, disease severity, and compliance with telemonitoring was recruited. Thirty-two stakeholders (healthcare professionals and managers) were interviewed. Transcribed coded data were analysed thematically using the framework approach. Interpretation was supported by multidisciplinary discussion. RESULTS: Patients and healthcare professionals considered that relationship-based continuity of care was important in the delivery of telemonitoring services. Managers placed emphasis on improved continuity of clinical management as a means of reducing healthcare costs. However, professionals described many operational challenges arising from the 'bolting-on' of telemonitoring provision to existing usual care provision which, they considered, resulted in the proliferation of additional managerial discontinuities. CONCLUSIONS: Managers and healthcare professionals face major challenges in meeting demands for both relationship continuity and continuity of clinical management in the development of telemonitoring services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Front desk talk: discourse analysis of receptionist-patient interaction.
- Author
-
Hewitt, Heather, McCloughan, Lucy, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
SOCIAL interaction ,RECEPTIONISTS ,PATIENTS ,FAMILY medicine ,VERBAL behavior ,PROBLEM solving - Abstract
Background: GP receptionists are the first point of contact with the NHS for most patients and have an important role in facilitating access to healthcare services. There is evidence that they are often perceived as impersonal, insensitive, or officious.Aim: To analyse the communicative styles of GP receptionists when dealing with patients.Design Of Study: Ethnographically situated discourse analysis of audio recordings.Setting: Three NHS GP surgeries in Scotland.Method: Fine-grained transcription and stage-by-stage analysis of digital audio recordings of 283 encounters between receptionists and patients engaged in front desk business. Participants were 16 receptionists and 283 patients.Results: Interaction between receptionists and patients consists mainly of verbal routines that are shaped by the administrative tasks completed through them. Receptionists adhere to these established patterns of use at all times, even when dealing with non-routine situations. Within the routine framework, receptionists communicate with patients using styles that display three dominant approaches: task centred, conventionally polite, and rapport building. Receptionists who adopt a task-centred approach use forms with minimal interpersonal content, while those who use conventionally polite forms or those associated with rapport building, give attention to establishing positive relationships with patients. There is no evidence that any stylistic approach is more efficient than another. There is, however, evidence that excessive adherence to routine verbal behaviour has an adverse impact on problem solving.Conclusion: Most receptionist discourse consists of the repetition of established verbal routines. Receptionists adopt verbal styles that are predominantly task centred, conventionally polite, or rapport building. Although all three styles enable the completion of reception work with similar levels of efficiency, task-centred styles may appear over-direct. The use of a routine approach when dealing with problematic situations can inhibit and delay their resolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Impact of hypertension control of a patient-held guideline: a randomised controlled trial.
- Author
-
McKinstry, Brian, Hanley, Janet, Heaney, David, McCloughan, Lucy, Elton, Rob, and Webb, David J.
- Subjects
HYPERTENSION ,BLOOD circulation disorders ,FAMILY medicine ,MEDICAL care ,CLINICAL trials ,BLOOD pressure - Abstract
Background Hypertension is generally poorly controlled in primary care. One possible intervention for improving control is the harnessing of patient expertise through education and encouragement to challenge their care. Aim To determine whether encouraging patients to manage their hypertension in an 'expert' manner, by providing them with information in a clear clinical guideline, coupled with an explicit exhortation to become involved in and to challenge their own care if appropriate, would improve their care. Design of study Single blind randomised controlled trial of detailed guideline versus standard information. Setting Single urban general practice over 1 year. Method Patient-held guideline with written explicit exhortation to challenge care when appropriate. Two hundred and ninety-four of 536 eligible patients on the practice hypertension register were recruited, all of whom were randomised into one of two groups. Two hundred and thirty-six patients completed the study. Results Primary outcome: average systolic blood pressure. Secondary outcomes: proportion of patients with blood pressure <150mmHg systolic and <90mmHg diastolic, average cholesterol, proportion of patients prescribed statins and aspirin according to guideline, hospital anxiety and depression score. No clinically, or statistically significant differences were found between intervention and control with respect to all parameters or in anxiety and depression levels. Statin and aspirin use improved throughout the course of the study in both groups. Statin use showed a trend (P = 0.02) in favour of control. Conclusion In this study there was no clinically significant perceived benefit to patients as a result of providing them with a hypertension guideline. Patient guidelines are currently planned for many chronic illnesses. It is important to determine the utility of such interventions before scarce resources are applied to them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
20. Product Diversity and Spectrum of Choice in Hospital ePrescribing Systems in England
- Author
-
Mozaffar, Hajar, Williams, Robin, Cresswell, Kathrin, Morison, Zoe, Slee, Ann, Team, Aziz Sheikh, Coleman, Jamie, Bates, David W., Robertson, Ann, Avery, Tony, Blake, Laurence, Chuter, Antony, Slight, Sarah P., Girling, Alan, Lee, Lisa, Lilford, Richard, McCloughan, Lucy, and Schofield, Jill
- Subjects
Computer and Information Sciences ,Computer Applications ,Information Technology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Health Care ,Health Care Policy ,Drug Policy ,Health Services Administration and Management ,Health Services Research ,Health Statistics ,Database and Informatics Methods ,Health Informatics ,Clinical Research Design ,Qualitative Studies ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Background: ePrescribing systems have considerable potential for improving healthcare quality and safety. With growing expectations about the benefits of such systems, there is evidence of widespread plans to implement these systems in hospitals in England where hitherto they have had a low uptake. Given the international drive away from developing home-grown to systems to procuring commercial applications, we aimed to identify available ePrescribing systems in England and to use the findings to develop a taxonomy of the systems offered by suppliers. Methods and Findings: We undertook a scoping review of the published and grey literature, and conducted expert interviews with vendors, healthcare organisations and national ePrescribing experts in order to identify the spectrum of available systems, identify and map their key features, and then iteratively develop and validate a taxonomy of commercial ePrescribing systems available to English hospitals. There is a wide range of available systems including 13 hospital-wide applications and a range of specialty systems. These commercial applications can be grouped into four sub-categories: standalone systems, modules within integrated systems, functionalities spread over several modules, and specialty systems. The findings also reveal that apart from four packaged applications (two of which are specialty systems), all other systems have none or less than two live implementations across England. Conclusions: The wide range of products developed in the last few years by different national and international suppliers, and the low uptake of these products by English hospitals indicate that the English ePrescribing market is still in its infancy. This market is undergoing rapid cycles of change, both with respect to the number of suppliers and their diversity of offerings. Constant renewal of knowledge is needed on the status of this evolving market, encompassing the products development and adoption, to assist implementation decisions and facilitate market maturity.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Primary care nursing research and the Scottish School of Primary Care.
- Author
-
Campbell, Susan E., McCloughan, Lucy, and Watson, Margaret
- Subjects
- *
EVIDENCE-based nursing , *PRIMARY care , *HIGHER education , *NURSING education , *MEDICAL schools - Abstract
Research capability and research capacity are two fundamental requirements in the development of a research-active, evidence-based nursing profession. The Scottish School of Primary Care is developing programmes to address these issues across Scotland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Promoting healthy teenage behaviour across three European countries through the use of a novel smartphone technology platform, PEGASO fit for future: study protocol of a quasi-experimental, controlled, multi-Centre trial.
- Author
-
Puigdomenech, Elisa, Martin, Anne, Lang, Alexandra, Adorni, Fulvio, Gomez, Santiago Felipe, McKinstry, Brian, Prinelli, Federica, Condon, Laura, Rashid, Rajeeb, Caon, Maurizio, Atkinson, Sarah, Lafortuna, Claudio L, Ciociola, Valentina, Hanley, Janet, McCloughan, Lucy, Castell, Conxa, Espallargues, Mireia, and PEGASO Fit For Future Consortium
- Abstract
Background: Behaviour change interventions targeting physical activity, diet, sleep and sedentary behaviour of teenagers show promise when delivered through smartphones. However, to date there is no evidence of effectiveness of multicomponent smartphone-based interventions. Utilising a user-centred design approach, we developed a theory-based, multi-dimensional system, PEGASO Fit For Future (PEGASO F4F), which exploits sophisticated game mechanics involving smartphone applications, a smartphone game and activity sensors to motivate teenagers to take an active role in adopting and maintaining a healthy lifestyle. This paper describes the study protocol to assess the feasibility, usability and effectiveness (knowledge/awareness and behavioural change in lifestyle) of the PEGASO system.Methods: We are conducting a quasi-experimental controlled cluster trial in 4 sites in Spain, Italy, and UK (England, Scotland) over 6 months. We plan to recruit 525, in a 2:1 basis, teenagers aged 13-16 years from secondary schools. The intervention group is provided with the PEGASO system whereas the comparison group continues their usual educational routine. Outcomes include feasibility, acceptance, and usability of the PEGASO system as well as between and within group changes in motivation, self-reported diet, physical activity, sedentary and sleeping behaviour, anthropometric measures and knowledge about a healthy lifestyle.Discussion: PEGASO F4F will provide evidence into the cross-cultural similarities and differences in the feasibility, acceptability and usability of a multi-dimensional smartphone based behaviour change intervention for teenagers. The study will explore facilitating factors, challenges and barriers of engaging teenagers to adapt and maintain a healthy lifestyle when using smartphone technology. Positive results from this ICT based multi component intervention may have significant implications both at clinical level, improving teenagers health and at public health level since it can present an influential tool against the development of chronic disease during adulthood.Trial Registration: https://clinicaltrials.gov Registration number: NCT02930148, registered 4 October 2016. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Clinical effectiveness and service implications of telemonitoring for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: the TELESCOT COPD randomised controlled trial.
- Author
-
Pinnock, Hilary, McCloughan, Lucy, Todd, Allison, Hanley, Janet, Lewis, Stephanie, Krishan, Ashma, MacNee, William, Plagiari, Claudia, Sheikh, Aziz, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
- *
TELEMEDICINE , *MEDICAL care , *PHYSICIANS , *OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases , *LUNG diseases - Abstract
Introduction: Telemonitoring offers a potential solution to the challenge of providing care for the increasing number of people living with long-term conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Five systematic reviews have concluded that the evidence for telemonitoring in COPD is inconclusive. Telemonitoring interventions generally include enhanced clinical care in order to provide monitoring services so that it is unclear if telemonitoring alone improves clinical outcomes and reduces hospital admissions Aim To determine if telemetrically supported self-monitoring of COPD postpones hospital admissions when both intervention and control groups receive optimised care. Methods: This was a one-year, researcher-blind randomised controlled trial in UK primary care. Patients with a COPD admission in the previous year were randomised centrally to telemonitoring or traditional modes of monitoring: both groups received the same clinical care. The primary outcome, assessed by a researcher blinded to allocation, was time to first hospital admission caused by a COPD exacerbation over the trial year. Other outcomes included number of admissions, bed days, deaths and health-related quality of life (St George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ)). The specialist community services recorded details of all contacts with the 186 patients under their services. Results: We randomised 256 patients (128 to telemonitoring): baseline characteristics were similar in both groups. Using an intention-to-treat analysis, there was no significant difference in the hazard ratio (HR) for admission in the control group compared with the telemonitoring group: adjusted HR 1.02 (95% CI 0.70 to 1.49). 61 patients in each group had an admission. There was no significant difference in the mean number of admissions per person (telemonitoring: 1.2 (SD 1.9), control: 1.1 (SD 1.6) p=0.54), or in their duration (telemonitoring: 9.4 days (SD 19.1) vs control 8.8 days (SD 15.9) p=0.66). There were 16/128 deaths in the telemonitoring group and 21/128 deaths in the control group: this difference was not statistically significant (OR 0.73 95%CI 0.36 to 1.47). Telemonitoring did not affect quality of life (mean St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire at 1 year: telemonitoring 68.2 (SD 16.3) vs control 67.3 (SD 17.3), mean difference 1.55 (95% CI -1.44 to 4.53). There were 2,431 alerts resulting in telephone contacts with the 93 telemonitoring patients under the care of the community teams, 112 of which resulted in a home visit. In addition, the telemonitoring patients received 521 telephone calls and 819 home visits which were not associated with alerts. By comparison, the patients in the control group only received 352 telephone calls and 682 home visits. Conclusions: When both groups received optimised care, telemonitoring did not appear to reduce the time to a hospital admission, duration of hospital admissions or increase quality of life. Telemonitoring triggered a large number of alerts which resulted in a substantial increase in the number of telephone calls and home visits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
24. Correction: Supported Telemonitoring and Glycemic Control in People with Type 2 Diabetes: The Telescot Diabetes Pragmatic Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
-
Wild, Sarah H., Hanley, Janet, Lewis, Stephanie C., McKnight, John A., McCloughan, Lucy B., Padfield, Paul L., Parker, Richard A., Paterson, Mary, Pinnock, Hilary, Sheikh, Aziz, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
GLYCEMIC control ,DIABETES - Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002098.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Front desk talk : a study of interaction between receptionists and patients in general practice surgeries
- Author
-
Hewitt, Heather Mary, Trappes-Lomax, Hugh., McCloughan, Lucy., and Meyerhoff, Miriam
- Subjects
305 ,linguistics - Abstract
Receptionists who work in general practice surgeries in Great Britain are part of a large, state-funded organisation, the National Health Service. Their duties include registering patients with practices, arranging appointments for them and checking them in for consultations, as well as administration of the ordering and collection of repeat prescriptions. In this study the talk-in-interaction through which these activity types are accomplished at three general practice surgeries in Scotland is analysed and the discursive construction of roles and identities by receptionists and patients in the three separate, but related, institutional contexts explored. The discourse through which front desk activity types are accomplished at all three sites is found to consist of a maximum of four stages. These are present in varying combinations in different activity types but are always constructed through predictable combinations of moves, which, except in encounters in which problems are resolved or errors remedied, are realised through a limited range of speech acts and conversational routines. Different choices of act or routine encode differing levels and styles of face protection, which appear to be determined by factors such as the social environment of each practice, the preferred relational approach of individual participants and the perceived level of imposition which an activity type entails. In addition, participants are found to adopt varying stances towards personal agency. While some assume full responsibility for their actions, in others agency is either disguised, for example when receptionists attribute decisions to other practice sources, or downplayed, for example when patients present themselves as needy or inexpert. Although there are variations both in the discourse at different practices and the positioning of individual receptionists and patients, both groups of participants are found to orient strongly to their institutional roles, only rarely drawing on the wider identity resources available to them. Receptionists seem intent on task completion, while patients are focused on attaining service goals, in both cases at the expense of interpersonal communication. As a result, relative to service encounters in other contexts, levels of remedial action are low and there is very little small talk. Thus, paradoxically, although general practice surgeries provide intimate personal care for patients, at their front desks relational matters do not appear to be a primary concern. A narrow focus on transactional goals and a neglect of the relational function of discourse may give rise to negative perceptions among both receptionists and patients. It is therefore proposed that the findings from this study be used in receptionist training programmes to raise awareness of patterns of discourse behaviour at the front desk, with a view to improving both the professional experience of receptionists and the quality of service which patients receive.
- Published
- 2006
26. Exploring telemonitoring and self-management by patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A qualitative study embedded in a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
-
Fairbrother, Peter, Pinnock, Hilary, Hanley, Janet, McCloughan, Lucy, Sheikh, Aziz, Pagliari, Claudia, and McKinstry, Brian
- Subjects
- *
SELF-management (Psychology) , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases , *QUALITATIVE research , *MEDICAL personnel , *CHRONIC diseases ,COMPUTERS in medical care - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: To explore patient and professional views on self-management in the context of telemonitoring in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Methods: Semi-structured interviews with patients with COPD and healthcare professionals participating in a randomized controlled trial of telemonitoring in Lothian, Scotland, explored experiences of using telemonitoring, and dynamics in patient–practitioner relationships. Transcribed data were analyzed using the Framework approach. Results: 38 patients (mean age 67.5 years) and 32 professionals provided 70 interviews. Patients considered that telemonitoring empowered self-management by enhancing their understanding of COPD and providing additional justification for their decisions to adjust treatment or seek professional advice. Professionals discussed telemonitoring as promoting compliance with medical advice and encouraged patients to exercise personal responsibility within clinical parameters, but expressed concerns about promoting the sick role and creating dependence on telemonitoring. Conclusion: Telemonitoring assisted many patients to embrace greater responsibility for their health but the model of service provision remained clinician-centered. A medical model of ‘compliant self-management’ may paradoxically have promoted dependence on professionals. Practice implications: Patients and professionals shared responsibility for meeting the central objective of prompt management of exacerbations of COPD. Care is needed, however, to minimize the risk in some patients, of telemonitoring increasing dependence on practitioner support. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Electronic prescribing systems in hospitals to improve medication safety: a multimethods research programme
- Author
-
Sheikh A, Coleman J, Chuter A, Williams R, Lilford R, Slee A, Morrison Z, Cresswell K, Robertson A, Slight S, Mozaffar H, Lee L, Shah S, Pontefract S, King A, Wiegel V, Watson S, Salema NE, Bates D, Avery A, Girling A, McCloughan L, and Watson N
- Abstract
Background: There is a need to identify approaches to reduce medication errors. Interest has converged on ePrescribing systems that incorporate computerised provider order entry and clinical decision support functionality., Objectives: We sought to describe the procurement, implementation and adoption of basic and advanced ePrescribing systems; to estimate their effectiveness and cost-effectiveness; and to develop a toolkit for system integration into hospitals incorporating implications for practice from our research., Design: We undertook a theoretically informed, mixed-methods, context-rich, naturalistic evaluation., Setting: We undertook six longitudinal case studies in four hospitals (sites C, E, J and K) that did not have ePrescribing systems at the start of the programme (three of which went live and one that never went live) and two hospitals (sites A and D) with embedded systems. In the three hospitals that implemented systems, we conducted interviews pre implementation, shortly after roll-out and at 1 year post implementation. In the hospitals that had embedded systems, we conducted two rounds of interviews, 18 months apart. We undertook a three-round eDelphi exercise involving 20 experts to identify 80 clinically important prescribing errors, which were developed into the Investigate Medication Prescribing Accuracy for Critical error Types (IMPACT) tool. We elicited the cost of an ePrescribing system at one (non-study) site and compared this with the calculated ‘headroom’ (the upper limit that the decision-maker should pay) for the systems (sites J, K and S) for which effectiveness estimates were available. We organised four national conferences and five expert round-table discussions to contextualise and disseminate our findings., Intervention: The implementation of ePrescribing systems with either computerised provider order entry or clinical decision support functionality., Main Outcome Measures: Error rates were calculated using the IMPACT tool, with changes over time represented as ratios of error rates (as a proportion of opportunities for errors) using Poisson regression analyses., Results: We conducted 242 interviews and 32.5 hours of observations and collected 55 documents across six case studies. Implementation was difficult, particularly in relation to integration and interfacing between systems. Much of the clinical decision support functionality in embedded sites remained switched off because of concerns about over alerting. Getting systems operational meant that little attention was devoted to system optimisation or secondary uses of data. The prescriptions of 1244 patients were audited pre computerised provider order entry and 1178 post computerised provider order entry implementation of system A at sites J and K, and system B at site S. A total of 21,138 opportunities for error were identified from 28,526 prescriptions. Across the three sites, for those prescriptions for which opportunities for error were identified, the error rate was found to reduce significantly post computerised provider order entry implementation, from 5.0% to 4.0% ( p < 0.001). Post implementation, the overall proportion of errors (per opportunity) decreased significantly in sites J and S, but remained similar in site K, as follows: 4.3% to 2.8%, 7.4% to 4.4% and 4.0% to 4.4%, respectively. Clinical decision support implementation by error type was found to differ significantly between sites, ranging from 0% to 88% across clinical contraindication, dose/frequency, drug interactions and other error types ( p < 0.001). Overall, 43 out of 78 (55%) of the errors had some degree of clinical decision support implemented in at least one of the hospitals. For the site in which no improvement was detected in prescribing errors (i.e. site K), the ePrescribing system represented a cost to the service for no countervailing benefit. Cost-effectiveness rose in proportion to reductions in error rates observed in the other sites (i.e. sites J and S). When a threshold value of £20,000 was used to define the opportunity cost, the system would need to cost less than £4.31 per patient per year, even in site S, where effectiveness was greatest. We produced an ePrescribing toolkit (now recommended for use by NHS England) that spans the ePrescribing life cycle from conception to system optimisation., Limitations: Implementation delays meant that we were unable to employ the planned stepped-wedge design and that the assessment of longer-term consequences of ePrescribing systems was impaired. We planned to identify the complexity of ePrescribing implementation in a number of contrasting environments, but the small number of sites means that we have to infer findings from this programme with considerable care. The lack of transparency regarding system costs is a limitation of our method. As with all health economic analyses, our analysis is subject to modelling assumptions. The research was undertaken in a modest number of early adopters, concentrated on high-risk prescribing errors and may not be generalisable to other hospitals., Conclusions: The implementation of ePrescribing systems was challenging. However, when fully implemented the ePrescribing systems were associated with a reduction in clinically important prescribing errors and our model suggests that such an effect is likely to be more cost-effective when clinical decision support is available. Careful system configuration considering clinical processes and workflows is important to achieving these potential benefits and, therefore, our findings may not be generalisable to all system implementations., Future Work: Formative and summative evaluations of efforts will be central to promote learning across settings. Other priorities emerging from this work include the possibility of learning from international experiences and the commercial sector., Funding: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research ; Vol. 10, No. 7. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information., (Copyright © 2022 Sheikh et al. This work was produced by Sheikh et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This is an Open Access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0 licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaption in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. For attribution the title, original author(s), the publication source – NIHR Journals Library, and the DOI of the publication must be cited.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Qualitative study of telemonitoring of blood glucose and blood pressure in type 2 diabetes.
- Author
-
Hanley J, Fairbrother P, McCloughan L, Pagliari C, Paterson M, Pinnock H, Sheikh A, Wild S, and McKinstry B
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Biomarkers blood, Body Weight, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 blood, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 physiopathology, England, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Qualitative Research, Scotland, Blood Glucose metabolism, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory methods, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 therapy, Primary Health Care methods, Self Care methods, Telemedicine methods
- Abstract
Objectives: To explore the experiences of patients and professionals taking part in a randomised controlled trial (RCT) of blood glucose, blood pressure (BP) and weight telemonitoring in type 2 diabetes supported by primary care, and identify factors facilitating or hindering the effectiveness of the intervention and those likely to influence its potential translation to routine practice., Design: Qualitative study adopting an interpretive descriptive approach., Participants: 23 patients, 6 nurses and 4 doctors who were participating in a RCT of blood glucose and BP telemonitoring. A maximum variation sample of patients from within the trial based on age, sex and deprivation status of the practice was sought., Setting: 12 primary care practices in Scotland and England., Method: Data were collected via recorded semistructured interviews. Analysis was inductive with themes presented within an overarching thematic framework. Multiple strategies were employed to ensure that the analysis was credible and trustworthy., Results: Telemonitoring of blood glucose, BP and weight by people with type 2 diabetes was feasible. The data generated by telemonitoring supported self-care decisions and medical treatment decisions. Motivation to self-manage diet was increased by telemonitoring of blood glucose, and the 'benign policing' aspect of telemonitoring was considered by patients to be important. The convenience of home monitoring was very acceptable to patients although professionals had some concerns about telemonitoring increasing workload and costs., Conclusions: Telemonitoring of blood glucose, BP and weight in primary care is a promising way of improving diabetes management which would be highly acceptable to the type of patients who volunteered for this study., Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN71674628; Pre-results., (Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Effect of downsampling and compressive sensing on audio-based continuous cough monitoring.
- Author
-
Casaseca-de-la-Higuera P, Lesso P, McKinstry B, Pinnock H, Rabinovich R, McCloughan L, and Monge-Álvarez J
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Compressive Strength, Female, Humans, Male, Sensitivity and Specificity, Cough diagnosis
- Abstract
This paper presents an efficient cough detection system based on simple decision-tree classification of spectral features from a smartphone audio signal. Preliminary evaluation on voluntary coughs shows that the system can achieve 98% sensitivity and 97.13% specificity when the audio signal is sampled at full rate. With this baseline system, we study possible efficiency optimisations by evaluating the effect of downsampling below the Nyquist rate and how the system performance at low sampling frequencies can be improved by incorporating compressive sensing reconstruction schemes. Our results show that undersampling down to 400 Hz can still keep sensitivity and specificity values above 90% despite of aliasing. Furthermore, the sparsity of cough signals in the time domain allows keeping performance figures close to 90% when sampling at 100 Hz using compressive sensing schemes.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.