Browsing by Subject "engagement"
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Item Open Access Assessing the Impact of Video-Based Assignments on Health Professions Students' Social Presence on Web: Case Study.(JMIR medical education, 2018-11-26) De Gagne, Jennie C; Kim, Sang S; Schoen, Ellen R; Park, Hyeyoung KBACKGROUND:Web-based education is one of the leading learning pedagogies in health professions education. Students have access to a multitude of opinions, knowledge, and resources on Web, but communication among students in Web-based courses is complicated. Technology adds a filter that makes it difficult to decipher the emotions behind words or read nonverbal cues. This is a concern because students benefit more from Web-based classes when they have a high perception of social presence. To enhance social presence on Web, we planned to use video-based assignments (VBAs) that encourage students to interact with each other. OBJECTIVE:This case study examines the impact of VBAs on health professions students and their experiences with the technology. This study aims to provide information to the growing body of literature about strategies to develop social presence on Web. METHODS:A total of 88 students from various nursing programs participated in the study. While the control group comprised 36 students who submitted only written-based assignments (WBAs), the experimental group of 52 students submitted VBAs besides WBAs. No enrolled student had previously participated in the course, and there were no repeaters in either of the groups. Both groups participated in a weekly survey comprising 4 open-ended questions and 3 Likert items on a scale of 1-5 (1=strongly disagree and 5=strongly agree). The social presence questionnaire assessed by the experimental group comprised 16 items and a 5-point Likert scale in which higher scores represented higher levels of social presence. While quantitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, qualitative responses were analyzed using content analysis. RESULTS:No significant differences were noted between the groups regarding the program (F1,87=0.36, P=.54). Regarding students' engagement, no statistically significant difference was observed between the 2 groups (t14=0.96, P=.35). However, the experimental group's average score for engagement was slightly higher (4.29 [SD 0.11]) than that of the control group (4.21 [SD 0.14]). Comparison of the total number of responses to the weekly engagement survey revealed 88.0% (287/326) as either strongly agree or agree in the control group, whereas 93.1% (525/564) in the experimental group. No statistically significant difference was observed between VBAs and WBAs weeks (t6=1.40, P=.21) in the experimental group. Most students reported a positive experience using VBAs, but technical issues were barriers to embracing this new approach to learning. CONCLUSIONS:This study reveals that social presence and engagement are positively associated with student learning and satisfaction in Web-based courses. Suggestions are offered to enhance social presence on Web that could generate better learning outcomes and students' experiences.Item Open Access Clinical Trials to Gain FDA Approval for Computerized Cognitive Training: What Is the Ideal Control Condition?(Frontiers in aging neuroscience, 2016-01) Motter, Jeffrey N; Devanand, Davangere P; Doraiswamy, P Murali; Sneed, Joel RItem Open Access Examining Patterns and Predictors of Diet Tracking via Mobile Technologies Among Women with Hypertension(2019) Christy, JacobBackground: Hypertension is a primary risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Studies have shown that hypertension may have a more severe effect on cardiovascular disease outcomes among women. To mitigate this risk of hypertension in women, evidence supports that the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet as an effective treatment. Despite decades of evidence supporting the efficacy of the DASH diet to treat hypertension, compliance to DASH remains consistently low across all populations. However, given the importance of self-monitoring for producing behavior change, innovative efforts that utilize this strategy are needed to improve adoption of DASH on a population level. Methods: This thesis is a secondary analysis of 3-month digital health intervention (DASH Cloud) to improve adoption of DASH among high risk women conducted in Durham, NC at Duke University. Participants (N= 59) were allocated into the DASH Cloud arm (N= 30), or the attention control arm (N = 29). Both groups received publicly available booklets about the DASH diet and were asked to self-monitor their diet using a commercially available diet tracking app. Only the intervention arm received personalized feedback about their compliance to the DASH diet and skills training videos via text message. The goal of this study was to understand patterns and predictors of self-monitoring via the diet tracking app. Results: Overall, the median proportion of self-monitoring engagement was 76%. By treatment arm, the median proportion of engagement in the DASH Cloud arm and attention control arm was 68% and 85%, respectively. Significant predictors of self-monitoring include those who had 100% engagement during the first two weeks and first month of the study, had marital support, lower BMI, at least a college degree, insurance, a negative perception of their food environment, were somewhat comfortable with using apps and less likely to use an app to track medication adherence. Conclusion: This study provided evidence that self-monitoring of diet is high within the context of an intervention aimed at using digital health to promote compliance to the DASH diet among high risk women. The strongest predictor of self-monitoring engagement was early engagement. This suggests that interventions aiming to improve rates of self-monitoring an improve uptake of DASH using diet tracking apps should aim to improve early engagement to achieve success overall. However, given the small sample size of the study, future studies should include a larger population to describe patterns of self-monitoring and ascertain other predictors of engagement.
Item Open Access Providing feedback following Leadership WalkRounds is associated with better patient safety culture, higher employee engagement and lower burnout.(BMJ quality & safety, 2018-04) Sexton, J Bryan; Adair, Kathryn C; Leonard, Michael W; Frankel, Terri Christensen; Proulx, Joshua; Watson, Sam R; Magnus, Brooke; Bogan, Brittany; Jamal, Maleek; Schwendimann, Rene; Frankel, Allan SBACKGROUND:There is a poorly understood relationship between Leadership WalkRounds (WR) and domains such as safety culture, employee engagement, burnout and work-life balance. METHODS:This cross-sectional survey study evaluated associations between receiving feedback about actions taken as a result of WR and healthcare worker assessments of patient safety culture, employee engagement, burnout and work-life balance, across 829 work settings. RESULTS:16 797 of 23 853 administered surveys were returned (70.4%). 5497 (32.7% of total) reported that they had participated in WR, and 4074 (24.3%) reported that they participated in WR with feedback. Work settings reporting more WR with feedback had substantially higher safety culture domain scores (first vs fourth quartile Cohen's d range: 0.34-0.84; % increase range: 15-27) and significantly higher engagement scores for four of its six domains (first vs fourth quartile Cohen's d range: 0.02-0.76; % increase range: 0.48-0.70). CONCLUSION:This WR study of patient safety and organisational outcomes tested relationships with a comprehensive set of safety culture and engagement metrics in the largest sample of hospitals and respondents to date. Beyond measuring simply whether WRs occur, we examine WR with feedback, as WR being done well. We suggest that when WRs are conducted, acted on, and the results are fed back to those involved, the work setting is a better place to deliver and receive care as assessed across a broad range of metrics, including teamwork, safety, leadership, growth opportunities, participation in decision-making and the emotional exhaustion component of burnout. Whether WR with feedback is a manifestation of better norms, or a cause of these norms, is unknown, but the link is demonstrably potent.Item Open Access Variable-dose support in an online mental health intervention: A randomized, controlled exploratory study(2022) Brooks, JackDigital health interventions are widely considered a highly promising solution to issues with access to evidence-based care. However, digital health interventions are limited by lower rates of engagement than are typically seen in traditional, face-to-face interventions. Despite the importance of engagement for intervention efficacy, engagement is rarely a primary outcome in intervention studies, and few studies have empirically tested intervention changes to improve engagement. Hazel was a two-arm, randomized controlled exploratory study designed to investigate the impact of intervention design on engagement as a primary outcome. We conducted a trial of a mental health intervention, based on the Unified Protocol, delivered entirely online. Participants were randomized to complete the 12-week intervention self-guided (the unsupported arm) or with 4 weeks of therapist support (the supported arm). We sought to measure engagement as comprehensively as possible and therefore collected numerous self-report, behavioral, and objective measures of multiple facets of engagement, including how participants felt about the intervention, how they used the intervention technology, and how their behavior changed over the course of the intervention. We collected engagement outcomes at baseline, weekly during the intervention, and immediately following completion of the intervention. We hypothesized that a low dose of therapist support would improve engagement and subsequent mental health outcomes while being more scalable and feasible to implement than offering therapist support during all intervention weeks. The aims of this small, exploratory study were to learn more about patterns of engagement with the intervention and identify issues with the current intervention and trial design. We used descriptive statistics and visualizations to understand and describe trends in the data rather than p-value significance testing, in line with best practices for pilot studies. We recruited 23 North Carolina-based adults with clinically elevated depression and/or anxiety symptoms. Overall, the intervention and trial design appeared acceptable to participants. Participants in both arms had relatively positive attitudes toward the intervention at all time points, and there was no evidence that the response burden of our outcome measures was too high. However, several of our measures showed little variation between participants or over time. Our findings provides guidance for future studies to select alternative measures and/or to administer some engagement measures less frequently. This represents a meaningful step forward for the field of engagement research, as prior to this study, there was almost no empirical guidance on how to select measures of engagement or how frequently to administer them. We observed a substantial drop in engagement for participants in the supported arm when video sessions began, contrary to our expectations that video sessions would improve engagement. Notably, video sessions began partway through the intervention and participants were blinded to condition until the onset of these sessions; changes to blinding and/or timing of video sessions might improve engagement. At the same time, those participants in the supported arm who did engage in video sessions (n=4) completed more of each weekly lesson than participants in the unsupported arm, indicating that there is evidence that therapist support can increase engagement. Secondary outcomes were sample diversity and depression and anxiety symptom change. Our sample was comparably diverse to other digital health studies in terms of race and socioeconomic status, and we overrecruited LGBTQ+-identified participants. Despite finding little evidence of changes in behavior or the theoretical mechanisms underlying the intervention, the majority of participants showed improvement in their symptoms.