Abstract

BackgroundChronic kidney disease (CKD) is a common and costly condition that is usually accompanied by multiple comorbidities including type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and obesity. Proper management of CKD can delay or prevent kidney failure and help mitigate cardiovascular disease risk, which increases as kidney function declines. Smart device apps hold potential to enhance patient self-management of chronic conditions including CKD.ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to develop a mobile app to facilitate self-management of nondialysis-dependent CKD.MethodsOur stakeholder team included 4 patients with stage 3-4 nondialysis-dependent CKD; a kidney transplant recipient; a caretaker; CKD care providers (pharmacists, a nurse, primary care physicians, a nephrologist, and a cardiologist); 2 health services and CKD researchers; a researcher in biomedical informatics, nutrition, and obesity; a system developer; and 2 programmers. Focus groups and in-person interviews with the patients and providers were conducted using a focus group and interview guide based on existing literature on CKD self-management and the mobile app quality criteria from the Mobile App Rating Scale. Qualitative analytic methods including the constant comparative method were used to analyze the focus group and interview data.ResultsPatients and providers identified and discussed a list of requirements and preferences regarding the content, features, and technical aspects of the mobile app, which are unique for CKD self-management. Requirements and preferences centered along themes of communication between patients and caregivers, partnership in care, self-care activities, adherence to treatment regimens, and self-care self-efficacy. These identified themes informed the features and content of our mobile app. The mobile app user can enter health data including blood pressure, weight, and blood glucose levels. Symptoms and their severity can also be entered, and users are prompted to contact a physician as indicated by the symptom and its severity. Next, mobile app users can select biweekly goals from a set of predetermined goals with the option to enter customized goals. The user can also keep a list of medications and track medication use. Our app includes feedback mechanisms where in-range values for health data are depicted in green and out-of-range values are depicted in red. We ensured that data entered by patients could be downloaded into a user-friendly report, which could be emailed or uploaded to an electronic health record. The mobile app also includes a mechanism that allows either group or individualized video chat meetings with a provider to facilitate either group support, education, or even virtual clinic visits. The CKD app also includes educational material on CKD and its symptoms.ConclusionsPatients with CKD and CKD care providers believe that a mobile app can enhance CKD self-management by facilitating patient-provider communication and enabling self-care activities including treatment adherence.

Highlights

  • Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects 15% of the US population and one out of every three US adults is at risk for developing CKD during their lifetime [1]

  • Patients and providers identified and discussed a list of requirements and preferences regarding the content, features, and technical aspects of the mobile app, which are unique for CKD self-management

  • Patients described that CKD self-management was multifaceted, and they spoke about the challenges of having multiple apps on their phone, which track the various aspects of CKD self-management

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects 15% of the US population and one out of every three US adults is at risk for developing CKD during their lifetime [1]. CKD is usually accompanied by multiple comorbidities including type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and obesity [1,3], and individualized therapies to manage each comorbidity may not be concordant, which may frustrate the patient. Disease self-management is a recognized intervention for improving health status for individuals with chronic conditions [5,6]. Self-management may consist of two overarching domains of care: health care and everyday life [10,11]. Self-management of everyday life involves achieving and maintaining “normality” in usual roles and functioning within the constraints set by living with a chronic condition and its emotional ramifications [10]. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a common and costly condition that is usually accompanied by multiple comorbidities including type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and obesity. Smart device apps hold potential to enhance patient self-management of chronic conditions including CKD

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