Biomedical REAl-Time Health Evaluation (BREATHE): toward an mHealth informatics platform

Author:

Bui Alex A T1,Hosseini Anahita2,Rocchio Rose3,Jacobs Nate3,Ross Mindy K4ORCID,Okelo Sande4,Lurmann Fred5,Eckel Sandrah6,Dzubur Eldin6,Dunton Genevieve6,Gilliland Frank6,Sarrafzadeh Majid2,Habre Rima6

Affiliation:

1. Medical and Imaging Informatics (MII) Group, Department of Radiological Sciences, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA

2. Computer Science Department, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA

3. Mobilize Labs, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA

4. Department of Pediatrics, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA

5. Sonoma Technologies, Inc., Petaluma, California, USA

6. Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo describe a configurable mobile health (mHealth) framework for integration of physiologic and environmental sensors to be used in studies focusing on the domain of pediatric asthma.Materials and MethodsThe Biomedical REAl-Time Health Evaluation (BREATHE) platform connects different sensors and data streams, contextualizing an individual’s symptoms and daily activities over time to understand pediatric asthma’s presentation and its management. A smartwatch/smartphone combination serves as a hub for personal/wearable sensing devices collecting data on health (eg, heart rate, spirometry, medications), motion, and personal exposures (eg, particulate matter, ozone); securely transmitting information to BREATHE’s servers; and interacting with the user (eg, ecological momentary assessments). Server-side integration of electronic health record data and spatiotemporally correlated information (eg, weather, traffic) elaborates on these observations. An initial panel study involving pediatric asthma patients was conducted to assess BREATHE.ResultsTwenty subjects were enrolled, during which BREATHE accrued seven consecutive days of continuous data per individual. The data were used to confirm knowledge about asthma (use of controller inhalers, time-activity behaviors, personal air pollution exposure), and additional analyses provided insights into within-day associations of environmental triggers and asthma exacerbations. Exit surveys focusing on mHealth usability, while positive, noted several translational challenges.DiscussionBased on these promising results, a longitudinal panel study to evaluate individual microenvironments and exposures is ongoing. Lessons learned thus far reflect the need to address various usability aspects, including convenience and ongoing engagement.ConclusionBREATHE enables multi-sensor mHealth studies, capturing new types of information alongside an evolving understanding of personal exposomes.

Funder

NIH

NIBIB

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Informatics

Reference47 articles.

1. National Center for Health Statistics (2010) Summary health statistics for US children: National Health Interview Survey;Bloom;Vital Health Stat,2009

2. Asthma-related school absenteeism and school concentration of low-income students in California;Meng;Prev Chronic Dis,2012

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