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Recruitment and ongoing engagement in a UK smartphone study examining the association Between weather and pain: cohort study

Recruitment and ongoing engagement in a UK smartphone study examining the association Between weather and pain: cohort study
Recruitment and ongoing engagement in a UK smartphone study examining the association Between weather and pain: cohort study
Background: the huge increase in smartphone use heralds an enormous opportunity for epidemiology research, but there is limited evidence regarding long-term engagement and attrition in mobile health (mHealth) studies.

Objective: the objective of this study was to examine how representative the Cloudy with a Chance of Pain study population is of wider chronic-pain populations and to explore patterns of engagement among participants during the first 6 months of the study.

Methods: participants in the United Kingdom who had chronic pain (≥3 months) and enrolled between January 20, 2016 and January 29, 2016 were eligible if they were aged ≥17 years and used the study app to report any of 10 pain-related symptoms during the study period. Participant characteristics were compared with data from the Health Survey for England (HSE) 2011. Distinct clusters of engagement over time were determined using first-order hidden Markov models, and participant characteristics were compared between the clusters.

Results: compared with the data from the HSE, our sample comprised a higher proportion of women (80.51%, 5129/6370 vs 55.61%, 4782/8599) and fewer persons at the extremes of age (16-34 and 75+). Four clusters of engagement were identified: high (13.60%, 865/6370), moderate (21.76%, 1384/6370), low (39.35%, 2503/6370), and tourists (25.44%, 1618/6370), between which median days of data entry ranged from 1 (interquartile range; IQR: 1-1; tourist) to 149 (124-163; high). Those in the high-engagement cluster were typically older, whereas those in the tourist cluster were mostly male. Few other differences distinguished the clusters.

Conclusions: cloudy with a Chance of Pain demonstrates a rapid and successful recruitment of a large, representative, and engaged sample of people with chronic pain and provides strong evidence to suggest that smartphones could provide a viable alternative to traditional data collection methods.
2291-5222
Druce, Katie L.
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McBeth, John
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van der Veer, Sabine N.
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Selby, David A.
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Vidgen, Bertie
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Georgatzis, Konstantinos
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Hellman, Bruce
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Lakshminarayana, Rashmi
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Chowdhury, Afiqul
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Schultz, David M.
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Sanders, Caroline
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Sergeant, Jamie C.
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Dixon, William G.
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Druce, Katie L.
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McBeth, John
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van der Veer, Sabine N.
34f20db8-f374-49cf-b1ed-b02b639a9f01
Selby, David A.
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Vidgen, Bertie
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Georgatzis, Konstantinos
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Hellman, Bruce
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Lakshminarayana, Rashmi
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Chowdhury, Afiqul
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Schultz, David M.
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Sanders, Caroline
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Sergeant, Jamie C.
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Dixon, William G.
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Druce, Katie L., McBeth, John, van der Veer, Sabine N., Selby, David A., Vidgen, Bertie, Georgatzis, Konstantinos, Hellman, Bruce, Lakshminarayana, Rashmi, Chowdhury, Afiqul, Schultz, David M., Sanders, Caroline, Sergeant, Jamie C. and Dixon, William G. (2017) Recruitment and ongoing engagement in a UK smartphone study examining the association Between weather and pain: cohort study. JMIR mHealth and uHealth, 5 (11), [e168]. (doi:10.2196/mhealth.8162).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the huge increase in smartphone use heralds an enormous opportunity for epidemiology research, but there is limited evidence regarding long-term engagement and attrition in mobile health (mHealth) studies.

Objective: the objective of this study was to examine how representative the Cloudy with a Chance of Pain study population is of wider chronic-pain populations and to explore patterns of engagement among participants during the first 6 months of the study.

Methods: participants in the United Kingdom who had chronic pain (≥3 months) and enrolled between January 20, 2016 and January 29, 2016 were eligible if they were aged ≥17 years and used the study app to report any of 10 pain-related symptoms during the study period. Participant characteristics were compared with data from the Health Survey for England (HSE) 2011. Distinct clusters of engagement over time were determined using first-order hidden Markov models, and participant characteristics were compared between the clusters.

Results: compared with the data from the HSE, our sample comprised a higher proportion of women (80.51%, 5129/6370 vs 55.61%, 4782/8599) and fewer persons at the extremes of age (16-34 and 75+). Four clusters of engagement were identified: high (13.60%, 865/6370), moderate (21.76%, 1384/6370), low (39.35%, 2503/6370), and tourists (25.44%, 1618/6370), between which median days of data entry ranged from 1 (interquartile range; IQR: 1-1; tourist) to 149 (124-163; high). Those in the high-engagement cluster were typically older, whereas those in the tourist cluster were mostly male. Few other differences distinguished the clusters.

Conclusions: cloudy with a Chance of Pain demonstrates a rapid and successful recruitment of a large, representative, and engaged sample of people with chronic pain and provides strong evidence to suggest that smartphones could provide a viable alternative to traditional data collection methods.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 August 2017
Published date: 1 November 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491471
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491471
ISSN: 2291-5222
PURE UUID: a0524d59-69f9-436b-b268-ec8664a76444
ORCID for John McBeth: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7047-2183

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Date deposited: 24 Jun 2024 17:11
Last modified: 25 Jun 2024 02:10

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Contributors

Author: Katie L. Druce
Author: John McBeth ORCID iD
Author: Sabine N. van der Veer
Author: David A. Selby
Author: Bertie Vidgen
Author: Konstantinos Georgatzis
Author: Bruce Hellman
Author: Rashmi Lakshminarayana
Author: Afiqul Chowdhury
Author: David M. Schultz
Author: Caroline Sanders
Author: Jamie C. Sergeant
Author: William G. Dixon

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