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Compliance Challenges in a Longitudinal COVID-19 Cohort Using Wearables for Continuous Monitoring: Observational Study

Authors :
Mario Mekhael
Chan Ho
Charbel Noujaim
Ala Assaf
Hadi Younes
Abdel Hadi El Hajjar
Humza A Chaudhry
Brennan Lanier
Nour Chouman
Noor Makan
Botao Shan
Yichi Zhang
Lilas Dagher
Omar Kreidieh
Nassir Marrouche
Eoin Donnellan
Source :
Journal of Medical Internet Research. 25:e43134
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
JMIR Publications Inc., 2023.

Abstract

Background The WEAICOR (Wearables to Investigate the Long Term Cardiovascular and Behavioral Impacts of COVID-19) study was a prospective observational study that used continuous monitoring to detect and analyze biometrics. Compliance to wearables was a major challenge when conducting the study and was crucial for the results. Objective The aim of this study was to evaluate patients’ compliance to wearable wristbands and determinants of compliance in a prospective COVID-19 cohort. Methods The Biostrap (Biostrap USA LLC) wearable device was used to monitor participants’ biometric data. Compliance was calculated by dividing the total number of days in which transmissions were sent by the total number of days spent in the WEAICOR study. Univariate correlation analyses were performed, with compliance and days spent in the study as dependent variables and age, BMI, sex, symptom severity, and the number of complications or comorbidities as independent variables. Multivariate linear regression was then performed, with days spent in the study as a dependent variable, to assess the power of different parameters in determining the number of days patients spent in the study. Results A total of 122 patients were included in this study. Patients were on average aged 41.32 years, and 46 (38%) were female. Age was found to correlate with compliance (r=0.23; P=.01). In addition, age (r=0.30; P=.001), BMI (r=0.19; P=.03), and the severity of symptoms (r=0.19; P=.03) were found to correlate with days spent in the WEAICOR study. Per our multivariate analysis, in which days spent in the study was a dependent variable, only increased age was a significant determinant of compliance with wearables (adjusted R2=0.1; β=1.6; P=.01). Conclusions Compliance is a major obstacle in remote monitoring studies, and the reasons for a lack of compliance are multifactorial. Patient factors such as age, in addition to environmental factors, can affect compliance to wearables.

Subjects

Subjects :
Health Informatics

Details

ISSN :
14388871
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medical Internet Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c780d7e7ef58f986db27bc3be1cc92a6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/43134