
Assessing the Need for Mobile Health (mHealth) in Monitoring the Diabetic Lower Extremity
Author(s) -
David K. Wallace,
Julie Perry,
Janelle Yu,
Joshua Mehta,
Paul Hunter,
Karen Cross
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
jmir mhealth and uhealth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.356
H-Index - 50
ISSN - 2291-5222
DOI - 10.2196/11879
Subject(s) - mhealth , medicine , diabetic foot , context (archaeology) , mobile phone , cohort , telemedicine , amputation , foot (prosody) , telehealth , health care , diabetes mellitus , medical emergency , physical therapy , nursing , surgery , psychological intervention , computer science , paleontology , telecommunications , linguistics , philosophy , economic growth , economics , biology , endocrinology
Background Complications of the diabetic lower extremity (such as diabetic foot ulcers, DFUs) occur when monitoring is infrequent, and often result in serious sequelae like amputation or even death. Objective To evaluate the potential application of mobile health (mHealth) to diabetic foot monitoring. We surveyed the self-management routines of a group of diabetic patients, as well as patient and clinician opinions on the use of mHealth in this context. Methods Patients with DFUs in Toronto, Ontario, Canada completed a 25-item questionnaire addressing their foot care practices, mobile phone use, and views on mHealth. Wound care clinicians across Canada were also surveyed using a 9-item questionnaire. Results Of the patients surveyed, 59/115 (51.3%) spend less than a minute checking their feet, and 17/115 (15%) of patients find it difficult to see their doctor or get to the hospital regularly. Mobile phone use was widespread in our patient cohort (93/115, 80.9%). Of mobile phone users, 68/93 (73.1%) would use a device on their mobile phone to help them check their feet. Of the clinicians who completed the questionnaire, only 7/202 (3.5%) were familiar with mHealth; however, 181/202 (92%) of clinicians expressed interest in using mHealth to monitor their patients between visits. Conclusions Patient education or motivation and clinician training were identified as the major barriers to mHealth use in the diabetic lower extremity, which may be a viable mechanism to improve DFU monitoring practices.