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Mobile Application vs Paper Pictorial Blood Assessment Chart to Track Menses in Young Women: A Randomized Cross-over Design - 20/03/18

Doi : 10.1016/j.jpag.2017.09.009 
Amanda E. Jacobson, MD 1, , Sara K. Vesely, PhD 2, Fareeda Haamid, DO 3, Myra Christian-Rancy, BS 1, Sarah H. O'Brien, MD, MSc 1, 4
1 Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Nationwide Children's Hospital/The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 
2 Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, College of Public Health, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 
3 Division of Adolescent Medicine, Nationwide Children's Hospital/The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 
4 Center for Innovation in Pediatric Practice, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 

Address correspondence to: Amanda E. Jacobson, MD, 700 Children's Dr, Columbus, OH 43205; Phone (614) 722-3510700 Children's DrColumbusOH43205

Abstract

Study Objective

Heavy menstrual bleeding is a common symptom reported by approximately 30% of women. The Pictorial Blood Assessment Chart (PBAC) score is often used to quantify severity of menstrual bleeding. However, the traditional PBAC paper diary might be subject to recall bias and compliance issues, especially in adolescents. We developed a mobile application (app) version of the PBAC score and evaluated patient satisfaction and compliance with app reporting vs paper reporting.

Design, Setting, Participants, Interventions, and Main Outcome Measures

This study was a randomized cross-over study of 25 postmenarchal female adolescents and young women ages 13-21 years. Participants agreed to track bleeding in 2 consecutive menstrual cycles and were randomized to use the PBAC paper diary or mobile app format first. At the end of each cycle, a satisfaction survey and system usability scale (app only) was used to assess the acceptability of the format used.

Results

Twenty-five participants had a median age of 15 years. Cross-over analysis showed that satisfaction level was significantly higher for the app (P < .001). Twenty of 25 (80%) participants preferred the app over the paper diary. For the app, 20 of 25 participants (80%) had high compliance for reporting bleeding, with a mean of 2 app entries per day. Participants' PBAC scores did not vary significantly between the paper diary (median, 95) and mobile app (median, 114). All paper diaries met definition for high compliance. There was no significant period or carryover effect.

Conclusion

This study showed that a PBAC app compared with the paper diary was the preferred method of recording menstrual bleeding in adolescents and showed feasibility as a research data collection tool.

El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.

Key Words : Menorrhagia, Female adolescents, Vaginal bleeding, Mobile applications, Mobile phone, Bleeding disorder, Pediatric hematology, Bleeding score


Esquema


 The authors indicate no conflicts of interest.


© 2017  North American Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology. Publicado por Elsevier Masson SAS. Todos los derechos reservados.
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Vol 31 - N° 2

P. 84-88 - avril 2018 Regresar al número
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