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Kimberly  Hickey

Kimberly Hickey

Verified

University of Michigan · Systems, Populations and Leadership

Active 1995–2023

h-index36
Citations4.2k
Papers16715 last 5y
Funding$7.1M
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Research topics

  • Physical therapy
  • Internal medicine
  • Medicine
  • Psychiatry

Selected publications

  • Mobile Electrocardiogram Monitoring and Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation

    The Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing · 2020 · 36 citations

    • Medicine
    • Physical therapy
    • Internal medicine

    BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with high recurrence rates and poor health-related quality of life (HRQOL) but few effective interventions to improve HRQOL exist. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to examine the impact of the "iPhone Helping Evaluate Atrial Fibrillation Rhythm through Technology" (iHEART) intervention on HRQOL in patients with AF. METHODS: We randomized English- and Spanish-speaking adult patients with AF to receive either the iHEART intervention or usual care for 6 months. The iHEART intervention used smartphone-based electrocardiogram monitoring and motivational text messages. Three instruments were used to measure HRQOL: the Atrial Fibrillation Effect on Quality of Life (AFEQT), the 36-item Short-Form Health survey, and the EuroQol-5D. We used linear mixed models to compare the effect of the iHEART intervention on HRQOL, quality-adjusted life-years, and AF symptom severity. RESULTS: A total of 238 participants were randomized to the iHEART intervention (n = 115) or usual care (n = 123). Of the participants, 77% were men and 76% were white. More than half (55%) had an AF recurrence. Both arms had improved scores from baseline to follow-up for AFEQT and AF symptom severity scores. The global AFEQT score improved 18.5 and 11.2 points in the intervention and control arms, respectively (P < .05). There were no statistically significant differences in HRQOL, quality-adjusted life-years, or AF symptom severity between groups. CONCLUSIONS: We found clinically meaningful improvements in AF-specific HRQOL and AF symptom severity for both groups. Additional research with longer follow-up should examine the influence of smartphone-based interventions for AF management on HRQOL and address the unique needs of patients diagnosed with different subtypes of AF.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Hasan Garan

    Columbia University

    91 shared
  • Angelo Biviano

    Columbia University

    50 shared
  • Meghan Reading Turchioe

    Columbia University

    50 shared
  • Alfred E. Buxton

    Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

    50 shared
  • James Coromilas

    Johnson University

    50 shared
  • Gail E. Hafley

    50 shared
  • Paul J. Wang

    Stanford University

    49 shared
  • François Haddad

    Cardiovascular Institute of the South

    49 shared
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