| Literature DB >> 26097799 |
Luuk P A Simons1, Florian Foerster2, Peter A Bruck3, Luvai Motiwalla4, Catholijn M Jonker1.
Abstract
Work place health support interventions can help support our aging work force, with mApps offering cost-effectiveness opportunities. Previous research shows that health support apps should offer users enough newness and relevance each time they are used. Otherwise the 'eHealth law of attrition' applies: 90 % of users are lost prematurely. Our research study builds on this prior research with further investigation on whether a mobile health quiz provides added value for users within a hybrid service mix and whether it promotes long term health? We developed a hybrid health support intervention solution that uses a mix of electronic and physical support services for improving health behaviours, including a mobile micro-learning health quiz. This solution was evaluated in a multiple-case study at three work sites with 86 users. We find that both our mobile health quiz and the overall hybrid solution contributed to improvements in health readiness, -behaviour and -competence. Users indicated that the micro-learning health quiz courses provided new and relevant information. Relatively high utilization rates of the health quiz were observed. Participants indicated that health insights were given that directly influenced every day health perceptions, -choices, coping and goal achievement strategies, plus motivation and self-norms. This points to increased user health self-management competence. Moreover, even after 10 months they indicated to still have improved health awareness, -motivation and -behaviours (food, physical activity, mental recuperation). A design analysis was conducted regarding service mix efficacy; the mobile micro-learning health quiz helped fulfil a set of key requirements that exist for designing ICT-enabled lifestyle interventions, largely in the way it was anticipated.Entities:
Keywords: Health competence; Healthy lifestyle intervention; Mobile health; Multi-channel services; Self-management; Service design; mApp
Year: 2015 PMID: 26097799 PMCID: PMC4464728 DOI: 10.1007/s12553-015-0095-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Technol (Berl) ISSN: 2190-7196
Fig. 1Basic requirements when designing ICT-supported healthy lifestyle interventions
Health behaviours distribution at start and 10 months
Green = health norm compliant. Yellow = nearly compliant. Red = the rest
Summary of worsened and improved behaviour scores at 1 and 10 months (irt start)
| Number of people, at 1 month ( | Number of people, at 10 months ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health Behaviours: | Worsened: | Improved: | Worsened: | Improved: |
| Moderate Physical Activity | 4 | 19 | 4 | 14 |
| Intensive Physical Activity | 4 | 21 | 4 | 18 |
| Smoking | 2 | 2 | 1 | 3 |
| Alcohol | 4 | 8 | 1 | 8 |
| Food, Vegetables | 2 | 23 | 3 | 16 |
| Food, Fruits | 5 | 32 | 1 | 18 |
| Food, BMI: | 2 | 4 | 1 | 5 |
| Recuperation/Relaxing | 5 | 16 | 3 | 14 |
| Energy | 5 | 17 | 5 | 14 |
Health readiness and fitness improvements after 10 months, n = 47
Green = (highly) agree. Yellow = neutral. Red/orange = (highly) disagree
Service elements that stimulated healthier behaviours (n = 64, at 1 month)
Green = (highly) agree. Yellow = neutral. Red/orange = (highly) disagree. Grey = not applicable
Cross-case differences
| Employer case | Case-specific characteristics and findings |
|---|---|
| Municipality | - Relatively lower start- and completion rates, partly due to the fact that several participants were sent by their managers and did not participate on a voluntary basis. - For those who did participate, the relative improvements in eating vegetables and adding moderate intensity physical activity were larger than in the other cases. |
| Advocacy | - About half of the group were (senior) volunteers and the average age in this group was highest. Several sudden events happened in the lives of these participants, hampering workshop participation and course completion for several of them. -Initial health behaviour scores were highest in this group: for daily physical activity, for fruit and vegetables consumption. However, their energy was lower and stayed low. - About 50 % were retired: some were more busy than ever. Others reported that the topics of work related stress and energy were less relevant for them. |
| Care Provider | - The regional director was a strong health advocate, participant and initiator in this group. Start- and compliance rates were highest is this group. - This group had the lowest start fruit consumption, but the highest final score. - The improvements were largest in energy and recuperation behaviours in this group, as well as the reported gains in mental fitness (at 1, 3 and 10 months). |
Fig. 2Health competence pyramid for long term health
Design evaluation (authors’ opinions, 5-point scale from - - to ++)
| Health Effectiveness | Coaching Performance | ICT Value Adding |
|---|---|---|
++ Health Literacy: Impacts from Health Quiz, workshops and education materials. + Health behaviours: BRAVO survey indicates improvements. +/− Health outcomes: Feeling more fit is a positive outcome, but more objective measures not used. + Quality of Life: Feeling better, mentally and physically more fit. | +/− Promoting health actions: Many health tips are provided. Impact depends on execution of plans. ++ Supporting self-efficacy: Users indicate a strong contribution from ‘know what my own influence is’ ++ Activating intrinsic motivation: A strongly activated desire to improve, plus rewards via feeling better. | + Motivators, triggers, experiences: health quiz, mail tips and surveys provided triggers, (fun) experiences plus hope and improvement opportunities. +/− Simplicity: Installation and first use were burdening for some. After that, usage was simple, low effort. +/− Fit with coach processes: Users felt synergies with the workshops, education materials, personal action plans and answering individual questions. |
Potential improvement: Using more objective health outcomes, possibly future 24 × 7 health tracking. | Potential improvement: Context aware and personalized coaching. | Potential improvement: Coach processes could be automated more (e.g., goals/means support). |