Can digital health apps provide patients with support to promote structured diabetes education and ongoing self-management? A real-world evaluation of myDiabetes usage

Author:

Blythin A.M.1ORCID,Elkes J.2,van Lindholm T.1ORCID,Bhogal A.1ORCID,Wilkinson T.M.A.13,Saville C.3,Kirk A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Research & Innovation, my mhealth Limited, Bournemouth, UK

2. School of Public Health, Imperial College Clinical Trials Unit, London, UK

3. Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, Hampshire, UK

Abstract

Objective Structured diabetes education has evidenced benefits yet reported uptake rates for those referred to traditional in-person programmes within 12 months of diagnosis were suboptimal. Digital health interventions provide a potential solution to improve diabetes education delivery at population scale, overcoming barriers identified with traditional approaches. myDiabetes is a cloud-based interactive digital health self-management app. This evaluation analysed usage data for people with type 2 diabetes focusing on digital structured diabetes education. Methods Descriptive quantitative analyses were conducted on existing anonymised user data over 12 months (November 2019–2020) to evaluate whether digital health can provide additional support to deliver diabetes education. Data was divided into two equal 6-month periods. As this overlapped the onset of COVID-19, analyses of its effect on usage were included as a secondary outcome. All data was reported via myDiabetes. Users were prescribed myDiabetes by National Health Service healthcare primary care teams. Those who registered for app use within the study period (n = 2783) were assessed for eligibility (n = 2512) and included if activated. Results Within the study period, n = 1245/2512 (49.6%) registered users activated myDiabetes. No statistically significant differences were observed between gender (p = 0.721), or age (p = 0.072) for those who activated (59.2 years, SD 12.93) and those who did not activate myDiabetes (57.6 years, SD 13.77). Activated users (n = 1119/1245 (89.8%)) viewed 11,572 education videos. No statistically significant differences were observed in education video views across age groups (p = 0.384), gender (p = 0.400), diabetes treatment type (p = 0.839) or smoking status (p = 0.655). Comparison of usage pre-COVID-19 and post-COVID-19 showed statistically significant increases in app activity (p ≤0.001). Conclusion Digital health is rapidly evolving in its role of supporting patients to self-manage. Since COVID-19 the benefits of digital technology have become increasingly recognised. There is potential for increasing diabetes education rates by offering patients a digital option in combination with traditional service delivery which should be substantiated through future research.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics,Health Policy

Reference47 articles.

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2. NHS England. News record high two million people at risk of type 2 diabetes [Internet]. NHS. 2020 [cited 2021 Aug 24]. Available from: https://www.england.nhs.uk/2020/02/record-high-two-million-people-at-risk-of-type-2-diabetes/

3. Diabetes UK. Facts about diabetes [Internet]. 2019 [cited 2020 Dec 10]. Available from: https://www.diabetes.co.uk/kids/diabetes-facts.html

4. NHS Digital. National diabetes audit-care processes and treatment targets 3rd quarter January–December 2020, Data release [Internet]. 2021. Available from: https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/national-diabetes-audit/care-processes-and-treatment-targets-3rd-quarter-january-december-2020-data-release

5. NHS England. Enhanced service specification. Weight management 2021/22 [Internet]. 2021. Available from: https://www.england.nhs.uk/commissioning/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2015/03/avoid-unplanned-admissions-03-15.pdf

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