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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Perioperative Medicine

Date Submitted: Mar 25, 2024
Date Accepted: Jul 17, 2024

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Impact of Consumer Wearables Data on Pediatric Surgery Clinicians’ Management: Multi-Institutional Scenario-Based Usability Study

Carter M, Linton SC, Zeineddin S, Pitt JB, De Boer C, Figueroa A, Gosain A, Lanning D, Lesher A, Islam S, Sathya C, Holl JL, Ghomrawi HM, Abdullah F

Impact of Consumer Wearables Data on Pediatric Surgery Clinicians’ Management: Multi-Institutional Scenario-Based Usability Study

JMIR Perioper Med 2024;7:e58663

DOI: 10.2196/58663

PMID: 39531288

PMCID: 11599887

Consumer Wearables Data Impact Pediatric Surgery Clinicians’ Management: A Multi-Institutional Scenario-Based Remote Simulation Study

  • Michela Carter; 
  • Samuel C Linton; 
  • Suhail Zeineddin; 
  • J Benjamin Pitt; 
  • Christopher De Boer; 
  • Angie Figueroa; 
  • Ankush Gosain; 
  • David Lanning; 
  • Aaron Lesher; 
  • Saleem Islam; 
  • Chethan Sathya; 
  • Jane L Holl; 
  • Hassan MK Ghomrawi; 
  • Fizan Abdullah

ABSTRACT

Background:

At present, parents lack objective methods to evaluate their child’s postoperative recovery following discharge from the hospital. In result, clinician’s are dependent upon a parent’s subjective assessment of the child’s health status and the child’s ability to communicate their symptoms. This subjective nature of home-monitoring contributes to unnecessary emergency department (ED) utilization as well as delays in treatment. However, the integration of data remotely collected using a consumer wearable device has the potential to provide clinicians with objective metrics for postoperative patients to facilitate informed longitudinal, remote assessment.

Objective:

This multi-institutional study evaluated the impact of adding objective recovery data remotely collected by a consumer wearable device to postoperative telephone encounters on clinicians’ management.

Methods:

Three simulated telephone scenarios of post-appendectomy patients were presented to clinicians at five children’s hospitals. Each scenario was then supplemented with wearable data concerning for or reassuring against a postoperative complication. Clinicians rated their likelihood of ED referral prior to and after the addition of wearable data to evaluate if it changed their recommendation. Clinicians reported confidence in their decision-making.

Results:

Thirty-four clinicians participated. Compared to the scenario alone, the addition of reassuring wearable data resulted in decreased likelihood of ED referral for all three scenarios (p<0.01). When presented with concerning wearable data, there was increased likelihood of ED referral for two of three scenarios (p=0.72, p=0.02, p<0.001). At the institutional level, there was no difference between the five institutions in how the wearable data changed the likelihood of ED referral for all three scenarios. With the addition of wearable data, 76-88% of clinicians reported increased confidence in their recommendations.

Conclusions:

The addition of wearable data to simulated telephone scenarios for post-discharge pediatric surgery patients impacted clinicians’ remote patient management at five pediatric institutions and increased clinician confidence. Wearable devices are capable of providing real-time measures of recovery which can be employed as a post-operative monitoring tool to reduce delays in care and avoidable health care utilization.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Carter M, Linton SC, Zeineddin S, Pitt JB, De Boer C, Figueroa A, Gosain A, Lanning D, Lesher A, Islam S, Sathya C, Holl JL, Ghomrawi HM, Abdullah F

Impact of Consumer Wearables Data on Pediatric Surgery Clinicians’ Management: Multi-Institutional Scenario-Based Usability Study

JMIR Perioper Med 2024;7:e58663

DOI: 10.2196/58663

PMID: 39531288

PMCID: 11599887

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