Documenting Compliance and Symptom Reactivity for Ambulatory Assessment Methodology Following Concussion in Adolescents and Young Adults: Feasibility of the Mobile Neurocognitive Health (MNCH) Project.

Objective: Evaluate compliance, symptom reactivity, and acceptability/experience ratings for an ecological momentary assessment (EMA) protocol involving ultra-brief ambulatory cognitive assessments in adolescent and young adult patients with concussion. Setting: Outpatient concussion clinic. Participants: 116 patients aged 13 to 25 years with concussion. Design: Prospective research design was used to examine compliance, symptom reactivity, and acceptability/experience for the Mobile Neurocognitive Health Project (MNCH); an EMA study of environmental exposures, symptoms, objective cognitive functioning, and symptom reactivity involving four, daily EMA surveys (7:30 AM, 10:30 AM, 3:00 PM, 8:00 PM) for a period of seven days following concussion. Overall compliance rates, symptom reactivity scores, and participant acceptability/experience ratings were described. A series of non-parametric Friedman Tests with post-hoc Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were used to examine differences in compliance and reactivity related to time of day and over the course of the protocol (first three days [Early Week] vs last four days [Late Week]). Main Measures: Compliance rates, symptom reactivity scores, participant experience/acceptability Results: Overall median compliance was 71%, and there were significantly fewer 7:30 AM surveys completed compared to the 10:30 AM (Z=-4.88, p<.001), 3:00 PM (Z=-4.13, p<.001), and 8:00 PM (Z=-4.68, p<.001) surveys. Compliance for Early Week surveys were significantly higher than Late Week (Z=-2.16, p=.009). The median symptom reactivity score was 34.39 out of 100 and was significantly higher for Early Week compared to Late Week (Z=-4.59, p<.001). Ninety-nine percent (89/90) of the sample agreed that the app was easy to use, and 18% (16/90) indicated that the app interfered with their daily life. Conclusion: Adolescents and young adults with concussion were compliant with the MNCH EMA protocol. Symptom reactivity to the protocol was low and the majority of participants reported that the app and protocol were acceptable. These findings support further investigation into applications of EMA for use in concussion studies.

This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. The published version of record [Documenting Compliance and Symptom Reactivity for Ambulatory Assessment Methodology Following Concussion in Adolescents and Young Adults: Feasibility of the Mobile Neurocognitive Health (MNCH) Project. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation (2024)] is available online at: 10.1097/HTR.0000000000000977.

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Work Title Documenting Compliance and Symptom Reactivity for Ambulatory Assessment Methodology Following Concussion in Adolescents and Young Adults: Feasibility of the Mobile Neurocognitive Health (MNCH) Project.
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Open Access
Creators
  1. R J Elbin
  2. Kori J Durfee
  3. Melissa N Womble
  4. Christina M Dollar
  5. Daniel E Elbich
  6. Jonathan George Hakun
  7. R J Elbin
  8. K J Durfee
  9. M N Womble
  10. S Jennings
  11. S Fedor
  12. C M Dollar
  13. J Felt
  14. D B Elbich
  15. Jonathan George Hakun
License In Copyright (Rights Reserved)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation
Publication Date June 26, 2024
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.1097/HTR.0000000000000977
Deposited November 25, 2024

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  • Created
  • Added Elbin_etal_JHTR_DocumentingCompliance_AcceptedVersion_2024.doc
  • Added Creator R J Elbin
  • Added Creator Kori J Durfee
  • Added Creator Melissa N Womble
  • Added Creator Christina M Dollar
  • Added Creator Daniel E Elbich
  • Added Creator Jonathan George Hakun
  • Added Creator R J Elbin
  • Added Creator K J Durfee
  • Added Creator M N Womble
  • Added Creator S Jennings
  • Added Creator S Fedor
  • Added Creator C M Dollar
  • Added Creator J Felt
  • Added Creator D B Elbich
  • Added Creator Jonathan George Hakun
  • Published
  • Updated