Authors

  1. Dowds, Murdo M. PhD
  2. Lee, Patricia H. MA
  3. Sheer, Jeffrey B. PhD
  4. O'Neil-Pirozzi, Therese M. ScD
  5. Xenopoulos-Oddsson, Annette MSc(A)
  6. Goldstein, Richard PhD
  7. Zainea, Kathryn L. MS
  8. Glenn, Mel B. MD

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether automated reminders from 2 contemporary personal digital assistant (PDA) devices produce higher rates of timely task completion in people with traumatic brain injury (TBI).

 

Setting: Outpatient and community rehabilitation settings.

 

Participants: Thirty-six adults aged 18 to 66 years with TBI and self-determined complaints of memory impairment.

 

Measures: Timely completion rates for assigned memory tasks under 4 randomly assigned memory aid conditions.

 

Results: Significantly, higher completion rates were found when using either PDA device when compared with a combined baseline and paper memory aid condition (for Palm OS device, Incidence Rate Ratio [IRR] = 2.14, P < .0005, CI [confidence interval] = 1.77-2.59; for Microsoft Pocket PC OS device, IRR = 1.47, P < .001, CI = 1.18-1.82). A significant difference in completion rates was also found between the 2 PDA devices (IRR = 1.46, P < .0005, CI = 1.26-1.70), with the Palm version producing the better scores.

 

Conclusions: Substantially higher rates of task completion (more than double in some cases) when using either PDA device suggest that rehabilitation clinicians can make productive use of PDA-based memory aids in their TBI patient populations. The strength of the effects of PDA device usage argues for further investigation of the impact of device usage on quality-of-life and costs of care, and of personal and caregiver factors predictive of successful and sustained device usage.