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Introduction And Hypothesis: Despite growing interest in a mobile-app bowel diary to assess fecal incontinence (FI) symptoms, data are limited regarding the correlation between mobile-app diary and questionnaire-based outcomes. The primary aim is to determine whether percentage reduction in FI episodes (FIEs)/week recorded on a mobile-app diary correlates with changes in scores of validated FI-symptom measures from baseline to 12 weeks in women with FI undergoing percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (PTNS) versus sham.
Methods: This is a planned secondary analysis of a multicenter randomized trial in which women with FI underwent PTNS or sham. FIEs were collected using a mobile-app diary at baseline and after 12 weekly sessions. FI-symptom-validated measures included St. Mark's, Accidental Bowel Leakage Evaluation, FI Severity Index (FISI), Colorectal Anal Distress Inventory, Colorectal Anal Impact Questionnaire, FI Quality of Life, Patient Global Impression of Improvement (PGI-I), and Patient Global Symptom Control (PGSC) rating. Spearman's correlation coefficient (ρ) was computed between %-reduction in FIEs/week and change in questionnaire scores from baseline to 12 weeks. Significance was set at 0.005 to account for multiple comparisons.
Results: Baseline characteristics of 163 women (109 PTNS, 54 sham) include mean age 63.4±11.6, 81% white, body mass index 29.4±6.6 kg/m, 4% previous FI surgeries, 6.6±5.5 FIEs/week, and St. Mark's score 17.4±2.6. A significant correlation was demonstrated between %-reduction in FIEs/week and all questionnaires (p<0.005). A moderate-strength correlation (|ρ|>0.4) was observed for St. Mark's (ρ=0.48), FISI (ρ=0.46), PGI-I (ρ=0.51), and PGSC (ρ=-0.43).
Conclusions: In women with FI randomized to PTNS versus sham, a moderate correlation was noted between FIEs measured via mobile-app diary and FI-symptom-validated questionnaire scores.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00192-023-05711-1 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Cardio
August 2025
Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Digital Health and Prevention, Lindhofstr. 22, Salzburg, 5020, Austria, 43 572558270.
Background: Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is essential for recovery from cardiovascular disease. However, patients often encounter challenges in navigating the transition from acute hospital care to CR. Mobile health (mHealth) technologies may support this critical phase; however, evidence regarding their clinical practice remains limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Inf Technol
July 2025
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Rice University, Houston, TX, United States.
Research on children's technology and digital media (TDM) is hampered by a lack of robust approaches for assessing TDM use. This study assessed the feasibility of passively measuring children's TV screens and mobile devices (TDM) in a naturalistic setting. In the three-day feasibility study, FLASH-TV was set up on one to two TVs the child (5-12 year olds) typically used in the home (n=20).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJMIR Form Res
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, 97403, United States.
Background: Poor sleep health is pervasive and contributes to long-lasting physical and psychological problems. As traditional sleep measurement can be burdensome, testing scalable and accessible sleep measurements is important.
Objective: The aim of this study was to test whether sleep features obtained through a smartphone app are comparable to other modes of sleep measurement (ie, daily diary and wearable actigraphy).
Behav Res Methods
August 2025
Department of Biomedical Informatics, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA.
This article reports on the validation of Fabla, a researcher-developed and university-hosted smartphone app that facilitates naturalistic and secure collection of participants' spoken responses to researcher questions. Fabla was developed to meet the need for tools that (a) collect longitudinal qualitative data and (b) capture speech biomarkers from participants' natural environments. This study put Fabla to its first empirical test using a repeated-measures experimental design in which participants (n = 87) completed a 1-week voice daily diary via the Fabla app, and an identical 1-week text-entry daily diary administered via Qualtrics, with diary method order counterbalanced and randomized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Health Technol Inform
August 2025
Associate Professor V, College of Nursing, Benguet State University-La Trinidad, Benguet, Philippines.
The use of healthcare technology, EMRs, digital applications, and gadgets in the clinical setting may influence how efficient and much time spent each nursing task. Information how nursing students spent their time on various activities in the clinical setting is significant, however, literature showed this is still poorly explored. Descriptive, time-use analysis design used, and self-administered activity diary, a notebook and personal mobile phones to daily record their time used in every task in the pediatric ward of one tertiary public hospital, within 24 hours exposure (in 3 days).
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