Effect of home monitoring via mobile app on the number of in-person visits following ambulatory surgery a randomized clinical trial

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Abstract

IMPORTANCE In the age of information and patient-centered care, new methods of delivering postoperative care must be developed and evaluated. OBJECTIVE To determine whether follow-up care delivered via a mobile app can be used to avert in-person follow-up care visits compared with conventional, in-person follow-up care in the first 30 days following ambulatory surgery. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A randomized clinical trialwas conducted from February 1 to August 31, 2015, among ambulatory patients undergoing breast reconstruction at an academic ambulatory care hospital. Patients were randomly assigned to receive follow-up care via a mobile app or at an in-person visit during the first 30 days after the operation. Analysis was intention-to-treat. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary end pointwas the number of in-person follow-up visits during the first 30 days after the operation. Secondary end points were the number of telephone calls and emails to health care professionals, patient-reported convenience and satisfaction scores, and rates of complications. RESULTS Of the 65 women in the study (mean [SD] age, 47.7 [13.4] years), 32 (49%) were in the mobile app group, and 33 (51%) were in the in-person follow-up care group. Those in the mobile app group attended a mean of 0.66 in-person visits, vs 1.64 in-person visits in the in-person follow-up care group, for a difference of 0.40 times fewer in-person visits (95%CI, 0.24-0.66; P < .001) and sent more emails to their health care professionals during the first 30 days after the operation (mean, 0.65 vs 0.15; incidence rate ratio, 4.13; 95%CI, 1.55-10.99; P = .005) than did patients in the in-person follow-up care group. This statistically significant difference was maintained at 3 months postoperatively. The mobile app group reported higher convenience scores than the in-person follow-up care group (incidence rate ratio, 1.39; 95%CI, 1.09-1.77; P = .008). There was no difference between groups in the number of telephone communications, satisfaction scores, or complication rates. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Patients undergoing ambulatory breast reconstruction can use follow-up care via a mobile app to avert in-person follow-up visits during the first 30 days after the operation. Mobile app follow-up care affects neither complication rates nor patient-reported satisfaction scores, but it improves patient-reported convenience scores.

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Armstrong, K. A., Coyte, P. C., Brown, M., Beber, B., & Semple, J. L. (2017). Effect of home monitoring via mobile app on the number of in-person visits following ambulatory surgery a randomized clinical trial. JAMA Surgery, 152(7), 622–627. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamasurg.2017.0111

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