m-Palliative Care Link: A Mobile App to Improve Symptom Control and Information Exchange Among Specialists and Local Health Workers Treating Tanzanian Cancer Patients

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dc.contributor.author Morse, R. S.
dc.contributor.author Ngoma, T.
dc.contributor.author Mushi, B.
dc.contributor.author Ngoma, M.
dc.date.accessioned 2023-04-21T12:55:10Z
dc.date.available 2023-04-21T12:55:10Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.citation Morse, R. S., Lambden, K., Quinn, E., Ngoma, T., Mushi, B., Ho, Y. X., ... & Miesfeldt, S. (2021). A mobile app to improve symptom control and information exchange among specialists and local health workers treating Tanzanian cancer patients: human-centered design approach. JMIR cancer, 7(1), e24062. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.muhas.ac.tz:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3312
dc.description.abstract Background. Improving access to end-of-life symptom control interventions among cancer patients is a public health priority in Tanzania in need of innovative community-based solutions. Mobile health technology holds promise; however, existing resources are limited and access to palliative care specialists (hereafter, specialists) is poor. A mobile platform that extends specialist access via shared care with community-based local health workers (LHWs) and provides remote support for pain and symptom management can address this gap in care, particularly in low resource settings. Objective. The aim of this study was to design and develop mobile-Palliative Care Link (mPCL), a web/mobile application (app) to support symptom assessment and care coordination and control, with a focus on pain. Methods. A human-centered iterative design framework was used to develop the mPCL prototype for use by specialists (physicians and nurses trained in palliative care), poor prognosis cancer patients and their lay caregivers (patients/caregivers), and LHWs. Central to mPCL is the validated patient-focused African Palliative care Outcome Scale (POS), adapted for automated, twice-weekly collection of patient/caregiver responses, and timely review, reaction and tracking by specialists and LHWs. Prototype usability testing sessions were conducted in person in a controlled setting with 21 key informants representing target end users. Sessions consisted of direct observations and qualitative feedback on ease-of use and recommendations for improvement. Results were used to build a usable, functional prototype for subsequent real-world testing. Early pilot testing was conducted by deploying the app among ten patients/caregivers, randomized to mPCL use versus phone-contact POS collection, and then gathering feedback from the specialists, LHWs and nurses who used mPCL to manage care. This feedback was employed to further optimize the app for a broader randomized field study to examine the app’s effectiveness in symptom control among cancer patients. Results. mPCL functionalities include the ability to create and update a synoptic clinical record; regular real time symptom assessment; patient/caregiver and care team communication and care coordination; symptom-focused educational resources; and easy access to emergency contact information. Results from usability and pilot testing demonstrated that all users were able to successfully navigate the app and feedback suggests that mPCL has clinical utility. User-informed recommendations included: further improvement in navigation of the app, simplification of patient/caregiver components and language, and delineation of user roles. Conclusions. We designed, built, and tested a usable, functional prototype of a mobile app supporting palliative care for cancer patients in Tanzania. mPCL is expressly designed to support coordinated care via customized interfaces supporting core users—patients/caregivers, LHWs and members of the palliative care team—and their respective roles. Future work is needed to demonstrate the effectiveness and sustainability of mPCL to remotely support symptom control needs of Tanzanian cancer patients, particularly in harder-to-reach areas. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher JMIR cancer en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries JMIR cancer;7(1), e24062.
dc.subject mobile health en_US
dc.subject mHealth en_US
dc.subject usability en_US
dc.subject palliative care en_US
dc.subject pain control en_US
dc.subject cancer en_US
dc.subject sub-Saharan Africa en_US
dc.title m-Palliative Care Link: A Mobile App to Improve Symptom Control and Information Exchange Among Specialists and Local Health Workers Treating Tanzanian Cancer Patients en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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