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A Study of Using the Stoma Self-care Apps by Patients With Enterostomy

H

HSIN LING CHEN

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Enterostomy

Treatments

Behavioral: stoma self-care apps
Behavioral: Traditional Education Receive colostomy health education manual with oral instruction

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06855082
24MMHIS457e

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study uses a stoma self-care app, accessed through LINE official account, a communication software commonly used by Chinese people, as an intervention measure to integrate technology acceptance and task technology adaptation models to explore the correlation of each aspect and its impact on self-care ability and quality of life. Whether the factors and task technology adaptability will affect the willingness and usage behavior of enterostomy patients, the research subjects can effectively improve their self-care ability, quality of life, usage willingness, and usage behavior after intervention.

Full description

Background: Self-care for patients after enterostomy surgery includes both cognitive and skill aspects. Insufficient self-care ability, inability to tell self-care precautions, and incorrect steps in performing care skills lead to leakage of the ostomy bag, and 70% of peristomal skin lesions occur. Complications lead to increased hospitalization days, readmission rates, and medical costs. Pain and other discomforts caused by skin complications around the stoma can cause anxiety, depression or anger, followed by financial burdens and impacts on families, affecting the quality of life. Ostomates use paper texts and oral instructions to provide post-enterostomy nursing care instructions. There is no regular follow-up mechanism after discharge. After returning home, enterostomy patients' self-care ability and adaptability to the stoma will be tested. Changes in the defecation outlet after enterostomy surgery affect many aspects. Patients need to relearn daily care. Physically, they need to maintain the cleanliness of the ostomy bag collection system at all times. Their lifestyle must be consistent with postoperative diet and exercise. Changes; psychologically, the changes in body function and appearance, anxiety, depression, or anger caused in the process of adapting to the enterostomy lifestyle, followed by the financial burden and impact on the family, and the physical, mental, and spiritual impact of family members on each other. It is a huge change, providing ongoing care guidance and support to ensure self-care and quality of life after returning home, meeting the constraints faced by patients with enterostomy needs and the challenges faced by their care guidance.

Purpose: This study uses a stoma self-care app, accessed through LINE official account, a communication software commonly used by Chinese people, as an intervention measure to integrate technology acceptance and task technology adaptation models to explore the correlation of each aspect and its impact on self-care ability and quality of life. Whether the factors and task technology adaptability will affect the willingness and usage behavior of enterostomy patients, the research subjects can effectively improve their self-care ability, quality of life, usage willingness, and usage behavior after intervention.

Method: It is a quantitative, single-blind, simple randomly assigned, quasi-experimental study. The surgical ward and stoma treatment room of a medical center in northern Taiwan accepted patients with enterostomy, including 25 patients in the control group and 25 patients in the experimental group. The interventional measures were performed on the first day after enterostomy surgery, using integrated technology to receive and adapt task technology. Model, the enterostomy self-care knowledge scale, and the stoma self-care ability scale (UES) are used to evaluate self-care ability, and the stoma patient quality of life scale (Stoma-QOL) is used to evaluate the quality of life, and a questionnaire survey is conducted. Analyze task technology fit.

Enrollment

50 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

20+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosed with colorectal cancer or intestinal obstruction or abdominal trauma, those who have received colostomy during this hospitalization
  • Conscious, can communicate in Mandarin or Minnan dialect
  • Have no communication, vision, or hearing impairments,
  • Have smartphones

Exclusion criteria

  • Those who are unable to cooperate due to visual, hearing, cognitive or mental impairments
  • Patients who need colostomy surgery due to non-colorectal cancer, intestinal obstruction, or abdominal trauma
  • Patients diagnosed by a physician as having surgery-related complications and requiring further surgery, such as infection, intestinal Perforation, stoma prolapse, stenosis, necrosis, bleeding, etc. (IV) Those who are unable to learn self-care on the day before discharge due to worsening of their illness.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

50 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

stoma self-care apps
Experimental group
Description:
uses a stoma self-care app, accessed through LINE official account, a communication software commonly used by Chinese people, as an intervention measure to integrate technology acceptance and task technology adaptation models to explore the correlation of each aspect and its impact on self-care ability and quality of life.
Treatment:
Behavioral: stoma self-care apps
conventional
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
conventional Traditional Education
Treatment:
Behavioral: Traditional Education Receive colostomy health education manual with oral instruction

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

HSIN LING CHEN; MING HSIANG TU

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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