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1 RTI International is a trade name of Research Triangle Institute 2951 Flowers Road, Suite 119 ■ Atlanta, Georgia, USA 30341 Phone 770-986-5062e-mail bmassoudi@rti.orgFax 770-234-5030 ActivHealth: A PHR System for At-Risk Sedentary Adults B arbara L. Massoudi, MPH, PhD AMIA Spring Congress May 24, 2007 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License © 2007-2009 RTI International
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2 Design Vision To develop a PHR application to assist sedentary adults in becoming more physically active Tools will support behavior change mediators within a highly individualized physical activity intervention Create an easy to use environment that has low initial user learning requirements, but scalability for advanced users Integrate user input from a wide variety of sources Modular open-source framework that can be plugged into a larger PHR system
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3 Behavior Change Mediators MediatorsPotential Innovation Goal-SettingA system that pulls data from a biomonitor and finds time in a person’s calendar for exercise Self-MonitoringSmall biomonitor providing data on activity level and physiological markers Self-EfficacyRealistic goal-setting system, instant messages from a virtual friend Social SupportSupportive instant messages, GPS device locating nearest exercise facility Rethink ThinkingPodcasts delivering thought-provoking information and instant messages Reward-SettingBiomonitor that tracks “points” and reminds people to reward themselves when a certain point level is reached
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4 User/Prototype Sample Population Phase I End-user Participants (N=28) Adult men (39%) and women (61%) Sedentary lifestyle At-risk for (43%) or suffering from (57%) chronic disease Caucasian (86%), Hispanic (7%), African-American (7%) Low-middle socio-economic status Healthcare Provider Group (N=8) Physicians and nurses from the Dallas area Family practice and internal medicine boarded Two physical therapists Personal trainers (N=6) Structured interviews
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5 Phase I - Design Analyses User-centered design analyses Facilitated group discussions and structured interviews with potential users Iterative design that built on past discussion to identify important data features, processes and data needed, for a activity focused PHR application Technology Scan Identified a wide variety of possible technical solutions to user needs currently available and in the future Project HealthDesign workshops Participated in discussions with other grantees, the design consultancy, the RWJF and others about PHRs Review of available literature on PHRs
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6 Phase I Findings - Personas Older individual – not concerned about privacy and security issues – Medicare, has time, moderate technology use Working individual – too busy, high use of technology, concerned about privacy and security – two – formerly active (experience to fall back on, good understanding, unrealistic expectation – weekend warrior) and lifetime sedentary (lack knowledge, understanding, chasing kids around is exercise) Chronic disease affected – more barriers (real or perceived) Healthcare provider – primary care setting, believe important, not a lot of time, throw the guidelines at patient Interventionist (personal trainer) – gym setting, “get in shape”, design workout and possible diet program, workout with or supervise workout, track progress over time, self-pay Interventionist (physical therapist) – rehab situation after injury, follow-on with general wellness, physical activity advice, minimal, insurance pay, possible self-pay after acute phase
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7 Phase I Findings - Task Purpose Analysis Sedentary adults: Identify goals Set up accountability Provide peer communication/support Identify physical activity partners Track physical activity (manually or automatically) Review progress towards goals Provide automated system feedback/encouragement Upload any pertinent info to healthcare providers
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8 Phase I Findings - Task Purpose Analysis Healthcare provider: Review patient dashboard report information (2-10 m) Review goals and suggest some activity plans (optional) Send encouraging messages (optional) Make referral to interventionist Decision support tool for making appropriate recommendation for physical activity
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9 Phase I Findings - Task Purpose Analysis Interventionist: Communication/education with clients Scheduling clients for appointments (including reminders) Encouragement/support of clients to engage in physical activity Review patient data and reports System task – add new clients
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10 Possible Tools & Devices Web portal for users to access tools, store users’ goals and self-monitoring information Devices will interface with web tools and include smart phones, PDAs, and iPods® Biomonitors to capture data on caloric burn, caloric intake, sleep, physical activity duration, total steps taken, etc Context sensitive messaging simulate virtual “coach” with support, incentives, and congratulations
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11 User/Prototype Sample Population Phase II End-user Participants (N=5) Adult men and women with a sedentary lifestyle Healthcare Provider Group (N=3) Physician, nurse, and a physical therapist
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12 Phase II - Prototyping Plan Systems Development Develop web-based tools to address behavior mediators Populate databases with content Creating the business rules to define system functions User-centered Testing Develop prototype scenarios focused on major components and processes Conduct an iterative approach to testing Collect feedback from consumers and healthcare providers Synthesis Update systems to respond to user feedback Develop documentation on findings, recommendations, and work yet to be completed
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13 Phase II - System Architecture Presentation Tier Business Tier Data Access Tier Data Tier
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14 Phase II - Peak Behind the Curtain ComponentsMakeFake User Information X* Health Status Assessment X* Readiness for Change – Motivation AssessmentX Goal SettingX Physical Activity Tracking X* Rewards and MotivatorsX Community of InterestX ReportingX Decision Support Page (Providers only)X *Partially functional
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15 Phase II - Design Showstoppers Getting users to…. Navigate to the ActivHealth portal Set up an account including their initial set of goals, rewards, reminders, and preferences Customizing system tools and experience to the users to the readiness for change
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16 Acknowledgements RTI International Barbara Massoudi, MPH, PhD, Director, Health Informatics (Project Director) Murrey Olmsted, PhD, Research Psychologist (Associate Project Director) Ann Zhang, MS, Senior Software Engineer The Cooper Institute Susan Campbell, PhD, Vice President for Education Ruth Ann Carpenter, MS, Director, Dissemination Beth Wright, MS, Director, Knowledge Management
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License © Research Triangle Institute
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