Brain-In-Hand technology for adults with acquired brain injury: A convergence of mixed methods findings

Author:

Kettlewell Jade1ORCID,Ward Asha2,das Nair Roshan34ORCID,Radford Kate2

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Academic Primary Care, Applied Health Research Building, University of Nottingham School of Medicine, Nottingham, UK

2. Centre for Rehabilitation & Ageing Research Injury, Inflammation and Recovery Sciences, School of Medicine University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK

3. Division of Psychiatry & Applied Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK

4. Institute of Mental Health, Nottinghamshire University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Nottingham, UK

Abstract

Introduction Individuals with acquired brain injury may find it difficult to self-manage and live independently. Brain-in-Hand is a smartphone app designed to support psychological problems and encourage behaviour change, comprised of a structured diary, reminders, agreed solutions, and traffic light monitoring system. Aim To evaluate the potential use and effectiveness of Brain-in-Hand for self-management in adults with acquired brain injury. Methods A-B mixed-methods case-study design. Individuals with acquired brain injury ( n = 10) received Brain-in-Hand for up to 12 months. Measures of mood, independence, quality of life, cognition, fatigue, goal attainment, participation administered at baseline, 6 and 12 months. Semi-structured interviews conducted with acquired brain injury participants ( n = 9) and healthcare workers ( n = 3) at 6 months. Results Significant increase in goal attainment after 6 months use (t(7) = 4.20, p = .004). No significant improvement in other outcomes. Qualitative data suggested improvement in anxiety management. Contextual (personal/environmental) factors were key in influencing the use and effectiveness of Brain-in-Hand. Having sufficient insight, appropriate support and motivation facilitated use. Conclusions Brain-in-Hand shows potential to support acquired brain injury, but further work is required to determine its effectiveness. Context played a pivotal role in the effectiveness and sustained use of Brain-in-Hand, and needs to be explored to support implementation.

Funder

Hermes Fellowship

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Ocean Engineering

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