Back to Search Start Over

Abstract MP24: Comparison of on-site versus Remote Support for a Mobile-Device Pilot Study: A Collaboration Between the Framingham Heart Study and Health eHeart Study (FHS-HeH)

Authors :
Ludovic Trinquart
Gregory M. Marcus
Kathryn L. Lunetta
Emily S. Manders
Nicole L. Spartano
Maureen Valentino
Joanne M. Murabito
Jeffrey E. Olgin
Caroline S. Fox
Emelia J. Benjamin
David D. McManus
Fangui Sun
Mark J. Pletcher
Source :
Circulation. 137
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2018.

Abstract

Background: New “e-Cohort” study designs provide resource-effective methods for collecting participant data. It is unclear if implementing an e-cohort without direct, in-person participant contact can achieve successful participation rates. The FHS-HeH randomized pilot study compared two distinct implementation strategies for co-enrolling participants from the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) into the Health eHeart Study, a digital cohort with infrastructure for collecting mHealth data. Methods: FHS participants who had an email address and smartphone were randomized to one of two approaches: remote vs. on-site support. In the remote arm, participants received an email containing an enrollment URL, and, upon enrollment, were sent four Bluetooth sensor devices. Participants in the on-site arm were invited to visit FHS and were provided in-person support for enrollment and connecting the devices. Results: Compared to participants that declined, individuals that accepted an invitation to participate in our pilot study (n=101 remote , n=101 on-site ) were more often women, highly educated, and younger (Figure 1). All on-site participants completed the consent, compared to 93% of the remote arm. Of participants who consented to participate, connection and initial use of devices was also higher in the on-site arm (100% connected the activity monitor, 94% the blood pressure cuff and scale, and 84% the electrocardiogram) compared to the remote arm (74%, 75%, 80%, and 42%). Roughly 75-78% of those that initially connected in both arms were still using the devices by the 3 rd month and 58-60% were still participating by the 6 th month. Conclusions: Our pilot study demonstrated that deployment of mobile devices among middle-aged and older adults in the context of an on-site clinic visit was associated with higher initial rates of device use as compared to offering only remote support. Once connected, drop-off rates were similar in both groups.

Details

ISSN :
15244539 and 00097322
Volume :
137
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3753e56ab3663dcf720f6a3f561bbcb2