Publication Date

2-1-2023

Journal

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

DOI

10.1016/j.apmr.2022.07.016

PMID

35964700

PMCID

PMC9898098

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

2-1-2024

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Author MSS

Published Open-Access

yes

Keywords

Adult, Humans, Prospective Studies, Brain Injuries, Traumatic, Surveys and Questionnaires, Self Report, Telemedicine, traumatic brain injury, measurement, neurobehavioral, mHealth, ecological momentary assessment, experience sampling method

Abstract

Objectives:

To develop and evaluate the feasibility of a short form of the Behavioral Assessment Screening Tool (BASTmHealth) for high frequency in situ self-reported assessment of neurobehavioral symptoms using mobile health technology for community-dwelling adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Design:

Prospective, repeated measures study of mHealth assessment of self-reported neurobehavioral symptoms in adults with and without a lifetime history of TBI over a two-week period.

Setting:

Community

Participants:

Community-dwelling adults with (n=52) and without (n=12) a lifetime TBI history consented to the study.

Interventions:

Not applicable

Main Outcome Measures:

BASTmHealth subscales (2-items each): Negative Affect, Fatigue, Executive Function, Substance Abuse, Impulsivity; Feasibility measured via compliance (assessments assigned/assessments completed) and participant-reported usability.

Results:

We developed the 10-item BASTmHealth as a screener for high frequency in situ self-reported assessment of neurobehavioral symptoms leveraging mHealth. Compliance for two-weeks of BASTmHealth supports its feasibility. Fifty-six of 64 participants (87.5%) who completed baseline assessments completed the two-weeks of daily assessments; all 8 participants who did not complete EMA had a history of TBI. Overall compliance was 81.4% (496 completed of 609 assigned assessments) among all 52 participants with TBI and 96.7% (494 completed of 511 assigned assessments) among the 44 who completed any daily measures, compared to 91.8% (135 completed of 147 assigned assessments) among those with no TBI history. Participants thought the daily surveys were easy to understand and complete and the number of prompts were reasonable.

Conclusions:

Conducting daily high frequency in situ self-reported assessment of neurobehavioral symptoms using the BASTmHealth is feasible among individuals with and without a lifetime history of TBI. Developing and evaluating self-reported assessments for community-based assessment is a critical step towards expanding remote clinical monitoring systems to improve post-TBI outcomes.

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