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Performance, acceptability, and validation of a phone application bowel diary.

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Zyczynski, HM; Richter, HE; Sung, VW; Arya, LA; Lukacz, ES; Visco, AG; Rahn, DD; Carper, B; Mazloomdoost, D; Gantz, MG ...
Published in: Neurourol Urodyn
November 2020

AIMS: To assess performance, acceptability, external validity, and reliability of a phone application electronic bowel diary (PFDN Bowel eDiary). METHODS: Women reporting refractory accidental bowel leakage (ABL) were enrolled in a randomized, crossover trial evaluating paper versus eDiary documentation of bowel movements (BM) and fecal incontinence episodes (FIE). Events were characterized by the presence or absence of urgency and Bristol stool scale consistency. The eDiary entries were date/time stamped and prompted by twice-daily phone notifications. Women were randomized to complete up to three consecutive 14-day diaries in two sequences. Diary events were compared between formats using the Pearson correlation. System usability scale (SUS) assessed eDiary usability. The eDiary test-retest reliability was assessed with intraclass correlations (ICCs). RESULTS: Paired diary data were available from 60/69 (87%) women 63.8 ± 9.8 years old with mean 13.2 BM per week and 6.5 FIE per week (nearly half with urgency). Among those providing diaries, adherence did not differ by paper or eDiary (93.3% vs. 95.0%). Notifications prompted 29.6% of eDiary entries, improving adherence from 70% to 95%. Paper and eDiaries were moderate to-strongly correlated for BMs per week (r = .61), urgency BMs per week (r = .76), FIE per week (r = .66), urgency FIE per week (r = .72). Test-retest reliability was good (ICC = .81 BMs per week, .79 urgency BMs per week, .74 FIE per week, and .62 urgency FIE per week). The mean SUS score was high, 82.3 ± 17.5 (range, 0-100) with 91.4% rating it easy to use, and 75.9% preferring the eDiary over paper. CONCLUSION: The PFDN Bowel eDiary correlated well with paper diary was considered easy to use, preferred to paper diaries, had high rates of confirmed real-time diary completion that obviated staff data entry.

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Published In

Neurourol Urodyn

DOI

EISSN

1520-6777

Publication Date

November 2020

Volume

39

Issue

8

Start / End Page

2480 / 2489

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Urology & Nephrology
  • Telephone
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Middle Aged
  • Humans
  • Female
  • Fecal Incontinence
  • Defecation
  • Data Collection
  • Cross-Over Studies
 

Citation

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Zyczynski, H. M., Richter, H. E., Sung, V. W., Arya, L. A., Lukacz, E. S., Visco, A. G., … NICHD Pelvic Floor Disorders Network. (2020). Performance, acceptability, and validation of a phone application bowel diary. In Neurourol Urodyn (Vol. 39, pp. 2480–2489). United States. https://doi.org/10.1002/nau.24520
Zyczynski, Halina M., Holly E. Richter, Vivian W. Sung, Lily A. Arya, Emily S. Lukacz, Anthony G. Visco, David D. Rahn, et al. “Performance, acceptability, and validation of a phone application bowel diary.” In Neurourol Urodyn, 39:2480–89, 2020. https://doi.org/10.1002/nau.24520.
Zyczynski HM, Richter HE, Sung VW, Arya LA, Lukacz ES, Visco AG, et al. Performance, acceptability, and validation of a phone application bowel diary. In: Neurourol Urodyn. 2020. p. 2480–9.
Zyczynski, Halina M., et al. “Performance, acceptability, and validation of a phone application bowel diary.Neurourol Urodyn, vol. 39, no. 8, 2020, pp. 2480–89. Pubmed, doi:10.1002/nau.24520.
Zyczynski HM, Richter HE, Sung VW, Arya LA, Lukacz ES, Visco AG, Rahn DD, Carper B, Mazloomdoost D, Gantz MG, NICHD Pelvic Floor Disorders Network. Performance, acceptability, and validation of a phone application bowel diary. Neurourol Urodyn. 2020. p. 2480–2489.
Journal cover image

Published In

Neurourol Urodyn

DOI

EISSN

1520-6777

Publication Date

November 2020

Volume

39

Issue

8

Start / End Page

2480 / 2489

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Urology & Nephrology
  • Telephone
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Middle Aged
  • Humans
  • Female
  • Fecal Incontinence
  • Defecation
  • Data Collection
  • Cross-Over Studies