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A Tablet-based Tool to Promote Self-management of Older Adults with Chronic Health Problems. Cynthia Jacelon, Jeung Choi, David Fisher, Allen Hanson, Eva Hudlicka , Raeann LeBlanc, Jenna Marquard Computer Science Students Nursing Student(s) Engineering Student(s). W ho.
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A Tablet-based Tool to Promote Self-management of Older Adults with Chronic Health Problems Cynthia Jacelon, Jeung Choi, David Fisher, Allen Hanson, Eva Hudlicka, Raeann LeBlanc, Jenna Marquard Computer Science Students Nursing Student(s) Engineering Student(s)
Who • Older cohort fastest growing segment of population • 12-27% of the world population • Italy and Japan have the same percentage of older adults as Florida • Over 80 fastest growing group • US: 4% live in institutions (nursing home) • US: 25% will spend some time in an institution • Longer life, more chronic illness
Who • As many as 85% of these individuals have one or more chronic health problems • The management of multiple chronic health problems can be complicated and involves balancing the demands of maintaining optimal health with other aspects of community living • Ineffective self-management may lead to exacerbations of symptoms and hospitalization for up to 30% of older adults annually
Self-management • “Self-management is a dynamic process in which individuals actively manage chronic illness” (Schulman-Green et al. 2012) • It is more than compliance or adherence to health prescriptions; it is a strategy for living with chronic disease. • Self-management implies that the individual with the chronic condition engages in daily management of their conditions by making informed decisions regarding health and life choices.
Specific Aim • The specific aim of this pilot project is to develop and test a computer tablet-based tool to support older adult's self-management of chronic health problems
Background • In previous research a model for self-management of chronic illness was created: • Individuals balance: • Activity • Attitude • Autonomy • Relationships • Health
Function • All chronic illness affects function • Individuals must be able to function to manage their health problems • Because function is critical to self-management, our project will not be disease focused, but on function
The Device: hardware • Tablet-based • Touch screen • Of a size that is easy to use • Large enough to see • Touch screen big enough to accommodate the individual’s hands • Patient enough to allow response time for an older person
The Device: software • User friendly • Supports self-management • Provides feedback to the user • Talks to peripherals • Data can be collected and analyzed
Project phases • Develop a computer tablet-based prototype of a self-management tool based on concrete use cases. • Design, develop, and test the tablet user interface for the tablet-based self-management tool to insure effectiveness and usability. • Evaluate the usability and effectiveness of the tablet-based tool with community dwelling older adults who are managing chronic illness.
Time line • January 2014: The team presents the goals and the broad overview of the desired application. Target 1/30/14. We need to know exactly which sensors we will be using. • February 2014: The students present the draft use cases, possibly with some UI mock ups to illustrate. Target 2/20/14. • March 2014: The students present final use cases. Target 03/04/14. We expect to have listed all the expected interactions. • Spring semester 2014: The students present iterative prototypes (on the simulator). Every third week target 03/25/14, 04/15/14. • May 2014: The students present the final demo, on simulator and deployed on the tablet. May, during finals period.
Timeline (con’t) • Summer 2014: Older adults with chronic illness use the device and provide feedback on user interface and application. Revisions as necessary • Continue to test and analyze data. • Spring 2015: Apply for funding to test on a broader scale.
Rehospitalization • Readmission to the hospital for the same health problem within 30 days of initial discharge • Return to a more acute level of care for the same health problem within 30 days. • Up to 25% of older adults who are discharged from the hospital will be re-hospitalized within 30 days
Rehospitalization • The Affordable Care Act (Obama Care) • Containing costs for healthcare • Denying payment to hospitals for re-hospitalization within 30 days • A lot of research on how healthcare providers can help individuals stay out of the hospital