Toward Patient-Centric Digital Monitoring of Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Mixed Methods Study
James Kenneth Timmis, Kerstin Alexandra Schorr, Rana Yüksel, Tim van den Broek, Sebastiaan Overeem, Dagmar Josine Smid, Willem Johan van den Brink, Nina Leonie Haring

TL;DR
This study explores patient preferences for digital monitoring of obstructive sleep apnea to improve care quality and patient experience.
Contribution
The study identifies patient-prioritized health aspects and preferences for digital measures in obstructive sleep apnea monitoring.
Findings
Improving subjective sleep quality was the top-ranked health goal for participants.
Smartwatches, sleep mats, and smart rings were preferred for RPM integration.
Patients want RPM metrics to expand beyond AHI and be more accurate and interpretable.
Abstract
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a sleep disorder characterized by repeated breathing disruptions during sleep. Remote patient monitoring (RPM) of OSA is important, yet contemporary methods are limited. Sensor-based digital health technologies (sDHTs) promise a step advance in OSA RPM, but must provide meaningful, actionable, and usable outputs for patients. While the centrality of considering patient views in sDHT development is widely acknowledged, patient perspectives and priorities are rarely assessed. This study aimed to identify patient-prioritized health aspects and preferences for digital measures and RPM to enhance OSA care quality and patient experience, guided by the digital measures that matter framework. We used a mixed methods design combining quantitative and qualitative approaches. Individuals with a formal OSA diagnosis and persistent sleep problems (n=223) completed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObstructive Sleep Apnea Research · Sleep and related disorders · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
