Involving health professionals in the development of an advanced symptom management system for young people: The ASyMS©-YG study
Male
Adolescent
Attitude of Health Personnel
150
610
Antineoplastic Agents
Information technology
chemotherapy
Self-examination Medical
young people
Cohort Studies
Cancer Chemotherapy
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
self care
Neoplasms
Surveys and Questionnaires
Chemotherapy
Humans
Neoplasm Invasiveness
Telecommunication in medicine
Monitoring, Physiologic
Neoplasm Staging
Quality of Health Care
Telenursing
Symptom management
Professional-Patient Relations
United Kingdom
3. Good health
Patient Satisfaction
Young people
Female
Self-care
Patient Participation
Nurse-Patient Relations
Follow-Up Studies
DOI:
10.1016/j.ejon.2009.03.004
Publication Date:
2009-05-06T09:11:20Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
ASyMS is an advanced symptom management system utilising mobile phone technology for patients to report cancer chemotherapy-related symptoms. The aim of this paper is to present health professionals involvement in the development of ASyMS for use with young people (YG) and evaluate their perceptions of the system. STAGE 1: Health professionals reviewed the symptoms chosen by young people to be included on the personal digital assistant questionnaire to confirm they would have universal relevance. These included: mouth sores, nausea, diarrhoea, vomiting and weight loss. STAGE 2: Health professionals completed a questionnaire prior to the study commencing, which suggested they felt ASyMS-YG would give young people control and facilitate timely interventions when symptoms occur. Post-study perceptions were sought through semi-structured interviews and consultation sessions with 23 health professionals. These showed two over-arching themes: young people's symptoms and perceptions of ASyMS-YG; and six sub-themes: increased control for young people; enhances communication between young people and health professionals; and helps with professional early intervention; increased support for young people; improve knowledge and understanding; technology appealing to young people.This early development work indicates that ASyMS-YG is acceptable to health professionals and their perceptions of the system were overall very positive. Health professionals will continue to be involved in the study through developing self-care guidelines and alert system, which will be tested in an exploratory trial (stage 3) and randomised controlled trial (stage 4) in the future.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (30)
CITATIONS (30)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....