Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 Clinical Trial
Official title:
Empowering Patients With Chronic Disease Using Profiling and Targeted Feedbacks Delivered Through Wearable Device (EMPOWER)
Chronic diseases are the leading cause of deaths in Singapore. The rising prevalence in chronic diseases with age and Singapore's rapidly aging population calls for new models of care to effectively prevent the onset and delay the progression of these diseases. Advancement in medical technology has offered new innovations that aid healthcare systems in coping with the rapid rising in healthcare needs. These include mobile applications, wearable technologies and machine learning-derived personalized behaviorial interventions. The overall goal of the project is to improve health outcomes in chronic disease patients through delivering targeted nudges via mobile application and wearable to sustain behavioral change. The objective is to design, develop and evaluate an adaptive interventional platform that is capable of delivering personalized behavioral nudges to promote and sustain healthy behavioral changes in senior patients with diabetes. The aim is to assess the clinical effectiveness of real-time personalized educational and behavioral interventions delivered through wearable (FitBit) and an in-integrative mobile application in improving patient activation scores measured using the patient activation measure (PAM). Secondary outcome measures include cost-effectiveness, quality of life, medication adherence, healthcare cost, utilization and lab results. Together with the experts from the SingHealth Regional Health System and National University of Singapore, the investigators will conduct a randomized controlled trial of 1,000 eligible patients. This proposal aims to achieve sustainable and cost-effective behavioral change in diabetes patients through patient-empowerment and targeted chronic disease care.
Traditional healthcare facility-based consultation model of episodic contact in managing chronic disease patients have limited exposure to monitor and intervene patients' lifestyle factors. These factors have been found to be more effective in managing 3H than medication. The proposed adaptive platform will utilize wearable and mobile application technologies which has the ability to continuous track several physiological and lifestyle factors data (e.g. moderate to vigorous active minutes, resting heart rate, sleep hours and quality and dietary habits) Similarly, due to the limited exposure that healthcare workers have with patients under the current consultation model, current health education and intervention tends to be "one size fits all", passive and "top down" knowledge-loading. Patients are expected to change their behavior or to remember health education knowledge after a consultation session. The proposed adaptive platform will be built using educational and behavioral cues obtained from multiple stakeholders (including patients) and multiple data sources with the aim to gather more comprehensive and targeted feedback that is relevant to patients' needs in their management of their 3H condition. As changes in lifestyle factors and habits takes time, the proposed platform can also provide timely and appropriate feedbacks and reminders to patients at a more constant interval as compared to current model of care when advice was only given during consultation follow-up To be able to add healthy years to the life of the current and future seniors,behavioral interventions that are closely studied and carefully implemented without disruption to the daily activity of the seniors is needed to achieve a revolutionary improvement in current primary care management. The investigators will conduct a qualitative study to have a deep and enriched understanding of the types of nudges that are suited for patients with chronic diseases. Through modelling approach using the electronic medical records, the proposed adaptive platform will profile patients into groups and pre-set the nudges that are suitable for them. This allows the investigators to identify patients that have a higher risk of complications of 3H and quickly match the desired nudges to change behavior. The proposed adaptive platform also aims to empower patients by providing patients with automated bite-sized knowledge of their health conditions. Coupled with real-time personalized feedback to their health behaviors, patients will be equipped with the knowledge to take charge of their health using far lesser healthcare manpower and resources. The proposed adaptive platform will be integrated into common mobile wearable which are readily available devices that are widely used by many Singaporeans now. As such it can also be scaled up relatively easily with minimal resources and education. Therefore, the proposed adaptive intervention will improve health outcomes and reduce healthcare utilization. An empowered patient will result in lesser complications and improve health outcomes, resulting in lower patient and caregiver burden, improving quality of life. ;
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