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An initial investigation of using smartphone-enabled micro-temporal data collection to increase acceptability, feasibility, and validity of research on cancer caregiving

  • Roswell Park Cancer Institute
  • University of Rochester
  • University of Florida
  • Colorado State University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: Smartphone-enabled micro-temporal data collection has potential to increase reliability, validity, and feasibility of participant-reported data and is a promising strategy for pediatric oncology supportive care and quality-of-life research. Given the demands of pediatric cancer caregiving, we sought to understand the feasibility and acceptability of smartphone data collection that included short surveys administered daily for 14 days via text message link. Methods: We recruited pediatric cancer caregivers, whose children (ages 0–18 years) were on active treatment, to complete a 14-day daily survey study via smartphone. We implemented our study procedures and examined feasibility through study enrollment rates, reasons for refusal, retention rates, number of reminders and number of completed surveys. We examined acceptability using caregiver ratings of survey length, burden, and ease of completion on a smartphone. Results: We recruited (N = 75) caregivers to the study and had an 84% enrollment rate. Reasons for declining participation included passive refusal (n = 13) and too busy (n = 1). The participant retention rate was 100% and compliance with daily survey completion was 99%. Most surveys were completed following two prompts and took participants 5 minutes or less to complete. Caregivers rated the surveys as easy to complete, low burden, and just right in length. Conclusion: A daily self-report, using a brief (≤5 minutes) survey administered on a smartphone via text message prompt, is a feasible and acceptable method. Future research should extend these findings to understand the generalizability across pediatric cancer caregiving contexts.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere29886
JournalPediatric Blood and Cancer
Volume69
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2022

Keywords

  • behavioral studies
  • outcomes research
  • pediatric oncology
  • psychosocial
  • quality of life

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