Effect of a Mobile Health App on Adherence to Physical Health Treatment: Retrospective Analysis

BackgroundAdherence to prescribed medical interventions can predict the efficacy of the treatment. In physical health clinics, not adhering to prescribed therapy can take the form of not attending a scheduled clinic visit (no-show appointment) or prematurely terminating treat...

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Main Authors: Jay Greenstein, Robert Topp, Jena Etnoyer-Slaski, Michael Staelgraeve, John McNulty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2021-12-01
Series:JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
Online Access:https://rehab.jmir.org/2021/4/e31213
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author Jay Greenstein
Robert Topp
Jena Etnoyer-Slaski
Michael Staelgraeve
John McNulty
author_facet Jay Greenstein
Robert Topp
Jena Etnoyer-Slaski
Michael Staelgraeve
John McNulty
author_sort Jay Greenstein
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundAdherence to prescribed medical interventions can predict the efficacy of the treatment. In physical health clinics, not adhering to prescribed therapy can take the form of not attending a scheduled clinic visit (no-show appointment) or prematurely terminating treatment against the advice of the provider (self-discharge). A variety of interventions, including mobile phone apps, have been introduced for patients to increase their adherence to attending scheduled clinic visits. Limited research has examined the impact of a mobile phone app among patients attending chiropractic and rehabilitation clinic visits. ObjectiveThis study aims to compare adherence to prescribed physical health treatment among patients attending a chiropractic and rehabilitation clinic who did and did not choose to adopt a phone-based app to complement their treatment. MethodsThe medical records of new patients who presented for care during 2019 and 2020 at 5 community-based chiropractic and rehabilitation clinics were reviewed for the number of kept and no-show appointments and to determine whether the patient was provider-discharged or self-discharged. During this 24-month study, 36.28% (1497/4126) of patients seen in the targeted clinics had downloaded the Kanvas app on their mobile phone, whereas the remaining patients chose not to download the app (usual care group). The gamification component of the Kanvas app provided the patient with a point every time they attended their visits, which could be redeemed as an incentive. ResultsDuring both 2019 and 2020, the Kanvas app group was provider-discharged at a greater rate than the usual care group. The Kanvas app group kept a similar number of appointments compared with the usual care group in 2019 but kept significantly more appointments than the usual care group in 2020. During 2019, both groups exhibited a similar number of no-show appointments; however, in 2020, the Kanvas app group demonstrated more no-show appointments than the usual care group. When collapsed across years and self-discharged, the Kanvas app group had a greater number of kept appointments compared with the usual care group. When provider-discharged, both groups exhibited a similar number of kept appointments. The Kanvas app group and the usual care group were similar in the number of no-show appointments when provider-discharged, and when self-discharged, the Kanvas app group had more no-show appointments compared with the usual care group. ConclusionsPatients who did or did not have access to the Kanvas app and were provider-discharged exhibited a similar number of kept appointments and no-show appointments. When patients were self-discharged and received the Kanvas app, they exhibited 3.2 more kept appointments and 0.94 more no-show appointments than the self-discharged usual care group.
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spelling doaj.art-ba8090c7a5ad445a827849113bdc41152023-08-28T19:55:27ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies2369-25292021-12-0184e3121310.2196/31213Effect of a Mobile Health App on Adherence to Physical Health Treatment: Retrospective AnalysisJay Greensteinhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9953-7892Robert Topphttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6667-5789Jena Etnoyer-Slaskihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4978-4374Michael Staelgraevehttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9961-5771John McNultyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6305-6971 BackgroundAdherence to prescribed medical interventions can predict the efficacy of the treatment. In physical health clinics, not adhering to prescribed therapy can take the form of not attending a scheduled clinic visit (no-show appointment) or prematurely terminating treatment against the advice of the provider (self-discharge). A variety of interventions, including mobile phone apps, have been introduced for patients to increase their adherence to attending scheduled clinic visits. Limited research has examined the impact of a mobile phone app among patients attending chiropractic and rehabilitation clinic visits. ObjectiveThis study aims to compare adherence to prescribed physical health treatment among patients attending a chiropractic and rehabilitation clinic who did and did not choose to adopt a phone-based app to complement their treatment. MethodsThe medical records of new patients who presented for care during 2019 and 2020 at 5 community-based chiropractic and rehabilitation clinics were reviewed for the number of kept and no-show appointments and to determine whether the patient was provider-discharged or self-discharged. During this 24-month study, 36.28% (1497/4126) of patients seen in the targeted clinics had downloaded the Kanvas app on their mobile phone, whereas the remaining patients chose not to download the app (usual care group). The gamification component of the Kanvas app provided the patient with a point every time they attended their visits, which could be redeemed as an incentive. ResultsDuring both 2019 and 2020, the Kanvas app group was provider-discharged at a greater rate than the usual care group. The Kanvas app group kept a similar number of appointments compared with the usual care group in 2019 but kept significantly more appointments than the usual care group in 2020. During 2019, both groups exhibited a similar number of no-show appointments; however, in 2020, the Kanvas app group demonstrated more no-show appointments than the usual care group. When collapsed across years and self-discharged, the Kanvas app group had a greater number of kept appointments compared with the usual care group. When provider-discharged, both groups exhibited a similar number of kept appointments. The Kanvas app group and the usual care group were similar in the number of no-show appointments when provider-discharged, and when self-discharged, the Kanvas app group had more no-show appointments compared with the usual care group. ConclusionsPatients who did or did not have access to the Kanvas app and were provider-discharged exhibited a similar number of kept appointments and no-show appointments. When patients were self-discharged and received the Kanvas app, they exhibited 3.2 more kept appointments and 0.94 more no-show appointments than the self-discharged usual care group.https://rehab.jmir.org/2021/4/e31213
spellingShingle Jay Greenstein
Robert Topp
Jena Etnoyer-Slaski
Michael Staelgraeve
John McNulty
Effect of a Mobile Health App on Adherence to Physical Health Treatment: Retrospective Analysis
JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
title Effect of a Mobile Health App on Adherence to Physical Health Treatment: Retrospective Analysis
title_full Effect of a Mobile Health App on Adherence to Physical Health Treatment: Retrospective Analysis
title_fullStr Effect of a Mobile Health App on Adherence to Physical Health Treatment: Retrospective Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Effect of a Mobile Health App on Adherence to Physical Health Treatment: Retrospective Analysis
title_short Effect of a Mobile Health App on Adherence to Physical Health Treatment: Retrospective Analysis
title_sort effect of a mobile health app on adherence to physical health treatment retrospective analysis
url https://rehab.jmir.org/2021/4/e31213
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