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Randomised controlled trial in overweight adolescents using a health App.
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Problem In Switzerland, 20% of children are overweight and novel methods are urgently needed to control the epidemic. Foundations of chronic diseases develop during childhood and track into adulthood obesity in more than 75% of patients, contributing to a significant increase in public health costs.
Multi-professional programs combining physical activity, nutritional and behavioral components have positive effects on therapy outcomes and co-morbidities, but these interventions induce high costs and are time-consuming for health providers, patients and families, in particular those living in rural regions. In fact, less than 0.2% of overweight children can participate in these programs. Thus, health information systems (HIS) have not only the potential to improve outcomes of obesity therapy but also to reduce health costs and increase access to health care in remote regions. Most HIS have indeed not been evaluated in this regard.
Preparation work In the PathMate project (SNF grant #135552), a mobile HIS has been developed for teenagers to support therapy and to prevent obesity in accordance with state-of-the-art multiprofessional programs and, in contrast to commercially available IT applications, with a high standard of data protection and safety. The IS effects of this HIS have been successfully evaluated in first longitudinal studies. In parallel, the impact of multi-professional therapies in Swiss children as well as potential confounders have been established in several longitudinal cohort studies with up to two-years follow-up.
Objectives
The overall goal of PathMate2 is to assess the impact of HIS services on the degree of obesity measured by the body mass index (BMI) incl. other health outcomes. Individual and shared understanding between patients and therapists are assessed as mediating factors. Specific goals are:
Methods HIS services are collaboratively developed by design-science research and evaluated by medical experts, patients, IS researcher and computer scientists. First, HIS services from PathMate are enhanced with SHS enabling real-time data analytics on mobile devices and results can be seen by both therapists and patients. Second, a randomized controlled trial (RCT) is conducted by a physician in a specialized pediatric obesity center in St. Gall with the goal to evaluate the effects of the re-designed and improved HIS services on adherence to therapy of the patient and his parents as well as on BMI and other health outcomes; a second RCT is conducted in parallel to assess the effects of these services in a community setting in the French-speaking part of Switzerland.
Importance and impact Building on the preliminary results of the PathMate project it is expected that the improved HIS services that are going to be designed and evaluated in PathMate2 have the potential for a significant impact on individual health and the quality of healthcare systems in general.
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40 participants in 4 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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