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The most crucial factor determining the success and quality of a colonoscopy procedure is the patient's adherence to proper bowel preparation. When a colonoscopy is scheduled, patients are provided with a diet plan designed to improve the quality of bowel cleansing, in addition to bowel-cleansing medications, through the endoscopy secretariat. Typically, in cases of inadequate bowel cleansing, where the bowel wall is not sufficiently visible during the colonoscopy, it is found that patients have poor adherence to the diet plan and have consumed incorrect or insufficient foods. This inadequate bowel cleansing can lead to missed pathologies such as polyps, colitis, diverticulosis, angiodysplasia, and cancer, which may cause patient complaints or symptoms.
Currently, patients who come to our secretariat from various clinics and polyclinics for colonoscopy appointments receive a single-page informational sheet containing a 5-day pre-procedure diet plan. In our study, the investigators aim to increase patient adherence to the colonoscopy diet by providing a comprehensive mobile application that includes recommendations and recipes for the foods listed in the colonoscopy preparation diet plan. This randomized study will involve selecting suitable patients who have accepted our study from routine colonoscopy requests and analyzing the impact of this mobile application on the quality of colon cleansing, the time to reach the cecum, and the detection rate of colon polyps.
The quality of bowel cleansing will be assessed using the Boston Bowel Preparation Score, where a score of 6 or higher for the entire colon and scores above 2 for each individual segment indicate adequate cleaning. The time to reach the cecum will be tracked using a stopwatch on our mobile phone during the colonoscopy, and the rate of colon polyp detection will be retrospectively reviewed after the study concludes.
The goal of this study is to enhance patient adherence through a free mobile application and to reduce unnecessary administrative costs.
Full description
A total of 104 patients were included in this study. At the time of scheduling an outpatient colonoscopy, intervention group and control group were randomly assigned using a random-number generator for treatment allocation. The research protocol was explained during the colonoscopy appointment, and patients, when the participants agreed to follow their preparation to the mobile application, were accepted as part of the patient intervention group. A consent form was signed and collected. The nurse responsible for patient education in the endoscopy secretariat informed the patient that this mobile application is an important component of bowel preparation and adhere strictly to the recipes and recommendations. The group who received the standard diet list and applied for their colonoscopy appointments were randomly designated as the control group. Bowel preparation was evaluated during the colonoscopy using the Boston Bowel Preparation Scale (BBPS). Cecal insertion and withdrawal times, polyp detection rate, utilization of the recipe resource, and patients' experiences related to colonoscopy were recorded.
The research team utilized freely available resources from general cookery recipe websites to create the recipes, adapting it to align with the recommendations for a low-residue diet . Recipes were selected based on criteria such as being visually appealing, easy to prepare, and easily modifiable to comply with the low-residue diet. A dietitian examined the recipes to guarantee that the recipes followed low-residue diet guidelines. The colon preparation recommendations have been obtained from free medical information websites on the internet to facilitate adherence to bowel cleansing.
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104 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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