• J. Med. Internet Res. · Apr 2020

    Fibromyalgia Impact Reduction Using Online Personal Health Informatics: Longitudinal Observational Study.

    • William Collinge, Robert Soltysik, and Paul Yarnold.
    • Collinge and Associates, Inc, Eugene, OR, United States.
    • J. Med. Internet Res. 2020 Apr 7; 22 (4): e15819.

    BackgroundPersonal health informatics have the potential to help patients discover personalized health management strategies that influence outcomes. Fibromyalgia (FM) is a complex chronic illness requiring individualized strategies that may be informed by analysis of personal health informatics data. An online health diary program with dynamic feedback was developed to assist patients with FM in identifying symptom management strategies that predict their personal outcomes, and found reduced symptom levels associated with program use.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to determine longitudinal associations between program use and functional impact of FM as measured by scores on a standardized assessment instrument, the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ).MethodsParticipants were self-identified as diagnosed with FM and recruited via online FM advocacy websites. Participants used an online health diary program ("SMARTLog") to report symptom ratings, behaviors, and management strategies used. Based on single-subject analysis of the accumulated data over time, individualized recommendations ("SMARTProfile") were then provided by the automated feedback program. Indices of program use comprised of cumulative numbers of SMARTLogs completed and SMARTProfiles received. Participants included in this analysis met a priori criteria of sufficient program use to generate SMARTProfiles (ie, ≥22 SMARTLogs completed). Users completed the FIQ at baseline and again each subsequent month of program use as follow-up data for analysis. Kendall tau-b, a nonparametric statistic that measures both the strength and direction of an ordinal association between two repeated measured variables, was computed between all included FIQ scores and both indices of program use for each subject at the time of each completed FIQ.ResultsA total of 76 users met the a priori use criteria. The mean baseline FIQ score was 61.6 (SD 14.7). There were 342 FIQ scores generated for longitudinal analysis via Kendall tau-b. Statistically significant inverse associations were found over time between FIQ scores and (1) the cumulative number of SMARTLogs completed (tau-b=-0.135, P<.001); and (2) the cumulative number of SMARTProfiles received (tau-b=-0.133, P<.001). Users who completed 61 or more SMARTLogs had mean follow-up scores of 49.9 (n=25, 33% of the sample), an 18.9% drop in FM impact. Users who generated 11 or more new SMARTProfiles had mean follow-up scores of 51.8 (n=23, 30% of the sample), a 15.9% drop.ConclusionsSignificant inverse associations were found between FIQ scores and both indices of program use, with FIQ scores declining as use increased. Based on established criteria for rating FM severity, the top one-third of users in terms of use had clinically significant reductions from "severe" to "moderate" FM impact. These findings underscore the value of self-management interventions with low burden, high usability, and high perceived relevance to the user.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT02515552; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02515552.©William Collinge, Robert Soltysik, Paul Yarnold. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 07.04.2020.

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