Dick Jonathan J, Nundy Shantanu, Solomon Marla C, Bishop Keisha N, Chin Marshall H, Peek Monica E
Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2011 Sep 1;5(5):1246-54. doi: 10.1177/193229681100500534.
We pilot-tested a text message-based diabetes care program in an urban African-American population in which automated text messages were sent to participants with personalized medication, foot care, and appointment reminders and text messages were received from participants on adherence.
Eighteen patients participated in a 4-week pilot study. Baseline surveys collected data about demographics, historical cell phone usage, and adherence to core diabetes care measures. Exit interview surveys (using close-coded and open-ended questions) were administered to patients at the end of the program. A 1-month follow-up interview was conducted surveying patients on perceived self-efficacy. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were used to compare baseline survey responses about self-management activities to those at the pilot's end and at 1-month follow-up.
Eighteen urban African-American participants completed the pilot study. The average age was 55 and the average number of years with diabetes was 8. Half the participants were initially uncomfortable with text messaging. Example messages include "Did you take your diabetes medications today" and "How many times did you check your feet for wounds this week?" Participants averaged 220 text messages with the system, responded to messages 80% of the time, and on average responded within 6 minutes. Participants strongly agreed that text messaging was easy to perform and helped with diabetes self-care. Missed medication doses decreased from 1.6 per week to 0.6 (p = .003). Patient confidence in diabetes self-management was significantly increased during and 1 month after the pilot (p = .002, p = .008).
Text messaging may be a feasible and useful approach to improve diabetes self-management in urban African Americans.
我们在城市非裔美国人群体中对基于短信的糖尿病护理项目进行了试点测试,该项目会向参与者发送个性化用药、足部护理和预约提醒的自动短信,并接收参与者关于依从性的短信。
18名患者参与了一项为期4周的试点研究。基线调查收集了有关人口统计学、既往手机使用情况以及对核心糖尿病护理措施依从性的数据。在项目结束时对患者进行了退出访谈调查(使用封闭式编码和开放式问题)。进行了为期1个月的随访访谈,调查患者的自我效能感。采用Wilcoxon符号秩检验来比较基线调查中关于自我管理活动的回答与试点结束时以及1个月随访时的回答。
18名城市非裔美国参与者完成了试点研究。平均年龄为55岁,患糖尿病的平均年限为8年。一半的参与者最初对短信服务感到不适应。示例短信包括“你今天服用糖尿病药物了吗”以及“你本周检查脚部伤口几次了?”参与者与该系统平均发送了220条短信,80%的时间会回复短信,平均回复时间在6分钟内。参与者强烈认同短信服务易于操作且有助于糖尿病自我护理。每周漏服药物剂量从1.6次降至0.6次(p = .003)。在试点期间及结束后1个月,患者对糖尿病自我管理的信心显著增强(p = .002,p = .008)。
短信服务可能是改善城市非裔美国人糖尿病自我管理的一种可行且有用的方法。