Postoperative Pain Procedure Patient Remote Monitoring With MyHealthPal Clinical Study
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Summary
The investigators want to explore the use of a smartphone app that allows patients to take photos of their wounds in early stages of healing, so that clinicians can monitor wound-healing remotely with the assistance of an AI program. Participants will choose whether they want to be in the control group or the app group. Participants in the app group will be asked to download an app on their personal smartphone before their surgery. After the procedure, participants will upload a photo of their surgery site as well as answer some questions about its characteristics either on a daily or weekly basis. A healthcare provider and the app's AI algorithm will observe this information to determine the risk of infection. Participants in the control group will not be asked to use the app. Their medical record will be monitored by study staff intermittently to see if they develop infection. This study will take approximately 16 weeks.
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * Adults (18 years old and older). * Ability to understand consent process and questionnaires. Patients with ready access to a smartphone, compatible smart device (operating system 5.0 version, also known as Lollipop, for Android and 13 or later version for iOS), smartphone aptitude, smartphone with sufficient memory space for the relevant app, and willingness to participate in the study as assessed by a questionnaire. * Patients undergoing one of the following surgeries within the Brigham and Women's Pain Management Practice: 1. Spinal cord stimulator implantation 2.…
Interventions
- DeviceMyHealthPal App
MyHealthPal (MHP) is a digital platform for postoperative patients to analyze surgical wound characteristics remotely through photos and additional patient data to provide physicians with SSI risk predictions and inform clinical decision making. It allows postoperative patients to capture and upload wound photos and enter surgery-related medication intake (antibiotics, painkillers), vital signs, wound inputs, and well-being patient data. Patients and providers can access the mobile applications using their own smart devices, while healthcare providers can access the desktop portal through a personal computer. MHP provides a prediction report for healthcare providers anytime a patient enters any data. If the patient uploads a high quality surgical incision photo, MHP's prediction reports include an SSI risk prediction: elevated risk or standard risk. MHP's AI-based algorithm analyzes wound photos for characteristics indicative of infection and provides risk predictions for providers.
Location
- Brigham and Women's Pain Management Center - 850 Boylston StChestnut Hill, Massachusetts