A new digital health program for patients with inflammatory bowel disease: preliminary program evaluation
A new digital health program for patients with inflammatory bowel disease: preliminary program evaluation
Background: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) causes chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. IBD is characterized by an unpredictable disease course that varies greatly between individuals and alternates between the periods of relapse and remission. A low energy level (fatigue) is a common symptom, whereas stress and reduced sleep quality may be the triggering factors. Therapeutic guidelines call for effective disease assessment, early intervention, and personalized care using a treat-to-target approach, which may be difficult to achieve through typical time- and resource-constrained standard care. Providing patients with a digital health program that incorporates helpful self-management features and patient support to complement standard care may be optimal for improving the disease course. Objective: This study aimed to perform a preliminary program evaluation, analyzing engagement and preliminary effectiveness and the effect on participants’ energy levels (fatigue), stress, and sleep quality, of a newly developed 16-week digital health program (SK-311 and SK-321) for patients with IBD. Methods: Adults with IBD were recruited to participate in a real-world, live, digital health program via Finnish IBD patient association websites and social media. No inclusion or exclusion criteria were applied for this study. Baseline characteristics were entered by the participants upon sign-up. Platform engagement was measured by tracking the participants’ event logs. The outcome measures of stress, energy levels (fatigue), and quality of sleep were reported by participants through the platform. Results: Of the 444 adults who registered for the digital health program, 205 (46.2%) were included in the intention-to-treat sample. The intention-to-treat participants logged events on average 41 times per week (5.9 times per day) during the weeks in which they were active on the digital platform. More women than men participated in the intervention (126/205, 88.7%). The mean age of the participants was 40.3 (SD 11.5) years, and their mean BMI was 27.9 (SD 6.0) kg/m2. In total, 80 people provided the required outcome measures during weeks 12 to 16 (completers). Treatment completion was strongly predicted by the number of active days in week 1. Analysis of the completers (80/205, 39%) showed significant improvements for stress (t79=4.57; P<.001; percentage change=-23.26%) and energy levels (t79=-2.44; P=.017; percentage change=9.48%); however, no significant improvements were observed for quality of sleep (t79=-1.32; P=.19). Conclusions: These results support the feasibility of a digital health program for patients with IBD (SK-311 and SK-321) and suggest that treatment completion might have a substantial positive effect on patient-reported stress and energy levels in a real-world setting. These findings are promising and provide initial support for using the Sidekick Health digital health program to supplement standard care for patients with IBD.
digital platform, digital therapeutics, fatigue, inflammatory bowel disease, mobile phone, real-world evidence, self-management, sleep, stress
Oddsson, Saemundur Jon
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Gunnarsdottir, Thrudur
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Johannsdottir, Lilja Gudrun
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Amundadottir, Maria Lovisa
60155c35-3494-4dba-ab85-70140ac71854
Frimannsdottir, Arna
bfaa7032-ec7a-468a-8678-d13396a0a866
Molander, Pauliina
389cd714-b7b0-4f94-80d6-bec2d98cd0ff
Ylanne, Anna Karoliina
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Islind, Anna Sigridur
46e6353f-a1b6-4628-916c-18e817695d03
Oskarsdottir, Maria
d159ed8f-9dd3-4ff3-8b00-d43579ab71be
Thorgeirsson, Tryggvi
206aefda-e942-4148-be0e-7775f8305cbd
2023
Oddsson, Saemundur Jon
85b8c38d-cc64-457a-877e-866fde98a271
Gunnarsdottir, Thrudur
0a095445-e297-4f0e-9823-500d3e00a202
Johannsdottir, Lilja Gudrun
16dd02d2-c852-4a1f-a8b6-91acbe502600
Amundadottir, Maria Lovisa
60155c35-3494-4dba-ab85-70140ac71854
Frimannsdottir, Arna
bfaa7032-ec7a-468a-8678-d13396a0a866
Molander, Pauliina
389cd714-b7b0-4f94-80d6-bec2d98cd0ff
Ylanne, Anna Karoliina
e3dbc204-1259-4a8a-b177-373e04cc91c4
Islind, Anna Sigridur
46e6353f-a1b6-4628-916c-18e817695d03
Oskarsdottir, Maria
d159ed8f-9dd3-4ff3-8b00-d43579ab71be
Thorgeirsson, Tryggvi
206aefda-e942-4148-be0e-7775f8305cbd
Oddsson, Saemundur Jon, Gunnarsdottir, Thrudur, Johannsdottir, Lilja Gudrun, Amundadottir, Maria Lovisa, Frimannsdottir, Arna, Molander, Pauliina, Ylanne, Anna Karoliina, Islind, Anna Sigridur, Oskarsdottir, Maria and Thorgeirsson, Tryggvi
(2023)
A new digital health program for patients with inflammatory bowel disease: preliminary program evaluation.
JMIR Formative Research, 7, [e39331].
(doi:10.2196/39331).
Abstract
Background: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) causes chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. IBD is characterized by an unpredictable disease course that varies greatly between individuals and alternates between the periods of relapse and remission. A low energy level (fatigue) is a common symptom, whereas stress and reduced sleep quality may be the triggering factors. Therapeutic guidelines call for effective disease assessment, early intervention, and personalized care using a treat-to-target approach, which may be difficult to achieve through typical time- and resource-constrained standard care. Providing patients with a digital health program that incorporates helpful self-management features and patient support to complement standard care may be optimal for improving the disease course. Objective: This study aimed to perform a preliminary program evaluation, analyzing engagement and preliminary effectiveness and the effect on participants’ energy levels (fatigue), stress, and sleep quality, of a newly developed 16-week digital health program (SK-311 and SK-321) for patients with IBD. Methods: Adults with IBD were recruited to participate in a real-world, live, digital health program via Finnish IBD patient association websites and social media. No inclusion or exclusion criteria were applied for this study. Baseline characteristics were entered by the participants upon sign-up. Platform engagement was measured by tracking the participants’ event logs. The outcome measures of stress, energy levels (fatigue), and quality of sleep were reported by participants through the platform. Results: Of the 444 adults who registered for the digital health program, 205 (46.2%) were included in the intention-to-treat sample. The intention-to-treat participants logged events on average 41 times per week (5.9 times per day) during the weeks in which they were active on the digital platform. More women than men participated in the intervention (126/205, 88.7%). The mean age of the participants was 40.3 (SD 11.5) years, and their mean BMI was 27.9 (SD 6.0) kg/m2. In total, 80 people provided the required outcome measures during weeks 12 to 16 (completers). Treatment completion was strongly predicted by the number of active days in week 1. Analysis of the completers (80/205, 39%) showed significant improvements for stress (t79=4.57; P<.001; percentage change=-23.26%) and energy levels (t79=-2.44; P=.017; percentage change=9.48%); however, no significant improvements were observed for quality of sleep (t79=-1.32; P=.19). Conclusions: These results support the feasibility of a digital health program for patients with IBD (SK-311 and SK-321) and suggest that treatment completion might have a substantial positive effect on patient-reported stress and energy levels in a real-world setting. These findings are promising and provide initial support for using the Sidekick Health digital health program to supplement standard care for patients with IBD.
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Published date: 2023
Keywords:
digital platform, digital therapeutics, fatigue, inflammatory bowel disease, mobile phone, real-world evidence, self-management, sleep, stress
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Local EPrints ID: 507914
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507914
PURE UUID: aeb86fb5-de7c-4f2e-bd71-d8086eeb1f22
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Date deposited: 07 Jan 2026 17:54
Last modified: 08 Jan 2026 03:27
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Contributors
Author:
Saemundur Jon Oddsson
Author:
Thrudur Gunnarsdottir
Author:
Lilja Gudrun Johannsdottir
Author:
Maria Lovisa Amundadottir
Author:
Arna Frimannsdottir
Author:
Pauliina Molander
Author:
Anna Karoliina Ylanne
Author:
Anna Sigridur Islind
Author:
Maria Oskarsdottir
Author:
Tryggvi Thorgeirsson
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