Bariatric surgery is the only treatment with long standing effect of morbid obesity. The key elements to success are the patient-selection, an experienced bariatric team and a completed follow-up program. Follow-up programs can consist of, for example, providing social support in support groups, teaching psychological skills, such as coping with the body change or teaching self-regulation of body weight. Furthermore, follow-up is important for dietary and sports counselling. The experience of the team members and coaching skills are essential in indicating the suitable procedure if necessary and guide the patients through the process. Various studies showed a significant positive effect of a completed follow-up program after bariatric surgery on maintaining weight loss. There is a burden for this on site provided care as organizational and financial resources are not unlimited. Especially as the follow-up period is an obligatory 5 years or if possible life long. Even if this aftercare is provided, not all patients complete the complete program. Various reasons are possible for an increasing no-show-rate, the loss of enthusiasm for onsite visits could be one of them. Analogue to other chronic diseases, the addition of telehealth could be useful. Telehealth is the delivery of health-related services and information via telecommunications technologies. It encompasses preventative, promotive and curative aspects. Examples are exchanging health services or education via videoconference, transmission of medical data for disease management (remote monitoring) and advice on prevention of diseases and promotion of good health by patient monitoring and follow-up. The participation of eHealth has been investigated and considered useful in the treatment of obesity. In a systematic review self-measured blood pressure monitoring was associated with better control of hypertension at least in the first year. Its value in a bariatric tract has not been investigated. It can be hypothesized that self-control by eHealth could enhance clinical outcome as more weight loss and comorbidity reduction. Long-term realistic goals setting, consistent use of routines and self-monitoring has been proven effective for weight loss maintenance. Patients with higher self-control are more certain regarding their abilities, which cause higher commitment and adherence to the program. This eventually leads to more weight loss. For this purpose an online monitoring program was designed for our Obesity Centre (BePATIENT) to provide preoperative information as well as aids in the post-bariatric phase by self-control wireless devices for registration of biometric outcomes, teleconference opportunities and access to additional information. In a prospective trial the implementation in several degrees is evaluated.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
Patients enrolled in the Online group have access to an online platform called BePatient. Patients are given the ability to access the platform and do eLearnings; watch videos about the operation and recovery; do quizzes, see dietary advices; see news about obesity and our department; read patients' stories. They are also able to chat with other patients.
Patients in the device group have, in addition to patients in the Online group, access to 4 measuring devices, including: weight scale, oximeter, activity bracelet and blood pressure device. Those devices are connectable to their mobile phones where patients can view their own progress.
All patients undergo the standard of care which included: the bariatric procedure and several outpatient visits including consultation with their surgeon, obesity nurses, dieticians and (if indicated) psychologists.
Catharina Hospital
Eindhoven, North Brabant, Netherlands
RECRUITINGBody Mass Index (BMI)
The BMI in kg/m2 at 2 years postoperatively.
Time frame: 2 years after the operation
Quality of Life
Quality of Life assessment using the RAND36-questionnaire. The RAND36 questionnaire consists of 36 questions about health related quality of life. The RAND36 scores are divided in 9 subscales: vitality, physical functioning, bodily pain, general health perceptions, physical role functioning, emotional role functioning, social role functioning, mental health and health change. Scores for each subscale are transformed to a linear 0 - 100 score. A higher score indicates a better quality of life in that domain.
Time frame: At 1 and 2 years after the operation
Evolution of obesity related comorbidities
Status of comorbidities are recorded at 1 and 2 years postoperatively and classified as either: cured (no medication and no complaints), improved (less medication needed and/or less complaints), unchanged (no alterations in medication use and no change in complaints), worsened (more medication needed and/or more complaints) or de novo (development of a comorbidity which was not present at inclusion). The reviewed comorbidities include: hypertension, diabetes mellitus, Arthralgia, obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, dyslipidemia and gastro-esophageal reflux disease.
Time frame: At 1 and 2 years after the operation
Program commitment
A 6-item questionnaire to assess program commitment (Neubert \& Cady 2001).
Time frame: At 1 and 2 years after the operation
Technical errors biometric devices
Number of technical issues reported by patients or health care professionals
Time frame: At 2 years after the operation
Length of hospitalization
Length of stay in hospital (days)
Time frame: At 2 years after the operation
Return to work (days)
Number of days patients start working again after operation
Time frame: At 1 year after the operation.
Patients' satisfaction
Satisfactory assessment patients (Numeric Rate Scale 0-10)
Time frame: At 1 and 2 years after the operation
Health care suppliers' satisfaction
Satisfactory assessment health care professional (Numeric Rate Scale 0-10)
Time frame: At 1 and 2 years after the operation
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