A Smartphone-Based Information Communication Technology Solution for Primary Modifiable Risk Factors for Noncommunicable Diseases: Pilot and Feasibility Study in Norway
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26445Dato
2022-02-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Gram, Inger Torhild; Skeie, Guri; Oyeyemi, Sunday Oluwafemi; Borch, Kristin Benjaminsen; Hopstock, Laila Arnesdatter; Løchen, Maja-LisaSammendrag
Background: Cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic respiratory diseases, and diabetes are the 4 main noncommunicable
diseases. These noncommunicable diseases share 4 modifiable risk factors (tobacco use, harmful use of alcohol, physical inactivity,
and unhealthy diet). Short smartphone surveys have the potential to identify modifiable risk factors for individuals to monitor
trends.
Objective: We aimed to pilot a smartphone-based information communication technology solution to collect nationally
representative data, annually, on 4 modifiable risk factors.
Methods: We developed an information communication technology solution with functionalities for capturing sensitive data
from smartphones, receiving, and handling data in accordance with general data protection regulations. The main survey comprised
26 questions: 8 on socioeconomic factors, 17 on the 4 risk factors, and 1 about current or previous noncommunicable diseases.
For answers to the continuous questions, a keyboard was displayed for entering numbers; there were preset upper and lower limits
for acceptable response values. For categorical questions, pull-down menus with response options were displayed. The second
survey comprised 9 yes-or-no questions. For both surveys, we used SMS text messaging. For the main survey, we invited 11,000
individuals, aged 16 to 69 years, selected randomly from the Norwegian National Population Registry (1000 from each of the 11
counties). For the second survey, we invited a random sample of 100 individuals from each county who had not responded to the
main survey. All data, except county of residence, were self-reported. We calculated the distribution for socioeconomic background,
tobacco use, diet, physical activity, and health condition factors overall and by sex.
Results: The response rate was 21.9% (2303/11,000; women: 1397/2263; 61.7%, men: 866/2263, 38.3%; missing: 40/2303,
1.7%). The median age for men was 52 years (IQR 40-61); the median age for women was 48 years (IQR 35-58). The main
reported reason for nonparticipation in the main survey was that the sender of the initial SMS was unknown.
Conclusions: We successfully developed and piloted a smartphone-based information communication technology solution for
collecting data on the 4 modifiable risk factors for the 4 main noncommunicable diseases. Approximately 1 in 5 invitees responded;
thus, these data may not be nationally representative. The smartphone-based information communication technology solution
should be further developed with the long-term goal to reduce premature mortality from the 4 main noncommunicable diseases.
Forlag
JMIR PublicationsSitering
Gram IT, Skeie G, Oyeyemi SO, Borch KBB, Hopstock LA, Løchen M. A Smartphone-Based Information Communication Technology Solution for Primary Modifiable Risk Factors for Noncommunicable Diseases: Pilot and Feasibility Study in Norway. JMIR Formative Research. 2022;6(2)Metadata
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