Design of a User-Centered Electronic Health Tool for Glomerular Disease Management

Glomerular Dis. 2024 May 3;4(1):105-118. doi: 10.1159/000539169. eCollection 2024 Jan-Dec.

Abstract

Introduction: Patients with primary glomerular disease (GN) have unique management needs. We describe the design of a user-centered, patient-facing electronic health (eHealth) tool to support GN management.

Methods: We surveyed patients and GN expert nephrologists on disease management tasks, educational needs, and barriers and facilitators of eHealth tool use. Results were summarized and presented to patients, nephrologists, engineers, and a behavioral and implementation science expert in stakeholder meetings to jointly design an eHealth tool. Key themes from the meetings are described using rapid qualitative analysis.

Results: Sixty-six patients with minimal change disease, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, IgA nephropathy, and membranous nephropathy responded to the survey, as well as 25 nephrologists from the NIH-funded Cure Glomerulonephropathy study network. Overall, patients performed fewer management tasks and acknowledged fewer informational needs than recommended by nephrologists. Patients were more knowledgeable about eHealth tools than nephrologists. Nine patient stakeholders reflected on the survey findings and noted a lack of awareness of key recommended management tasks and receiving little guidance from nephrologists on using eHealth. Key themes and concepts from the stakeholder meetings about eHealth tool development included the need for customizable design, trustworthy sources, seamless integration with other apps and clinical workflow, and reliable data tracking. The final design of our eHealth tool, the UrApp System, has 5 core features: "Profile" generates personalized data tracking, educational information, facilitation with provider discussions and inputting other preferences; "Data Tracking" displays patient health data with the ability to communicate important trends to patients and nephrologists; "Resources" provides trusted education information in a personalized manner; "Calendar" displays key events and generate reminders; and "Journal" facilitates information documentation using written or audio notes.

Conclusion: Our theory- and evidenced-based, stakeholder-engaged design process created designs for an eHealth tool to support the unique needs of patients with GN, optimized for effectiveness and implementation.

Keywords: Disease management; Electronic health; Glomerulonephritis; Mobile applications; Nephrotic syndrome.

Grants and funding

This study was funded by NephCure Kidney International. The funder had no role in the design, data collection, data analysis, and reporting of the study. The study was also partly supported by CureGN. Funding for the CureGN consortium is provided by U24DK100845 (formerly UM1DK100845), U01DK100846 (formerly UM1DK100846), U01DK100876 (formerly UM1DK100876), U01DK100866 (formerly UM1DK100866), and U01DK100867 (formerly UM1DK100867) from the NIDDK. Dates of funding for first phase of CureGN were September 16, 2013–May 31, 2019. Analytic support was provided in part by National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (UM1TR004404). Patient recruitment is supported by NephCure Kidney International.