Deakin University
Browse

Patient use of smartphones to communicate subjective data in clinical trials

journal contribution
posted on 2011-02-01, 00:00 authored by Craig Woods, K Dumbleton, L Jones, D Fonn
<b>Purpose</b>. Various methods have been used in clinical trials to collect time-sensitive subjective responses, including study diaries, telephone interviews, and use of text messaging. However, all of these methods are limited by the uncertainty of when the participants enrolled in the study actually record their responses. This technical note reports on the utility of the BlackBerry smartphone to collect such data and why such a system provides advantages over other methods to report subjective ratings in clinical studies.<br><br><b>Methods</b>. The Centre for Contact Lens Research developed an on-line web-enabled system that permits participants to record and immediately transmit subjective rating scores in numerical form directly into a web-enabled database. This, combined with the utility of BlackBerrys, enabled time-specific e-mail requests to be sent to the study participants and then for that data to be simultaneously transmitted to the web-enabled database. This system has been used in several clinical trials conducted at the Centre for Contact Lens Research, in which data were collected at various times and in several specific locations or environments.<br><br><b>Results</b>. In the clinical trials conducted using this system, participants provided responses on 97.5% of occasions to the requests for data generated by the automated system. When the request was for data on a set date, this method resulted in responses of 84.1% of the time.<br><br><b>Conclusions</b>. The series of clinical trials reported here show the benefits of the utilization of the BlackBerry to collect time- or environment-sensitive data via a web-enabled system.<br>

History

Related Materials

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, American Academy of Optometry

Journal

Optometry and vision science

Volume

88

Pagination

290 - 294

ISSN

1040-5488

eISSN

1538-9235

Usage metrics

    Research Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC