Usability, Acceptability, and Adherence to an Electronic Self-Monitoring System in Patients With Major Depression Discharged From Inpatient Wards

Apr 23, 2017Journal of medical Internet research

How Patients with Major Depression Use and Accept an Electronic Self-Monitoring System After Hospital Discharge

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Abstract

76% of enrolled patients (34 out of 45) completed the four-week study utilizing the Daybuilder self-assessment system.

  • Patients entered mood data on 93.8% of days, sleep on 89.8%, activity on 85.6%, and medication adherence on 88.0%.
  • User satisfaction scores averaged 86.2, with 79% of patients reporting that the system met their expectations.
  • A significant decrease in depression severity was observed on the Hamilton depression rating scale, from 18.0 to 13.3 (P<.01).
  • Quality of life improved according to the WHO-5 scale, increasing from 31.3 to 43.4 (P<.001).
  • Sleep onset was significantly delayed by an average of 48 minutes (P<.001), which negatively affected mood (P=.03).

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