| Literature DB >> 28582245 |
Gabriela Constantinescu1,2, Irene Loewen1, Ben King1,3, Chris Brodt3, William Hodgetts1,2, Jana Rieger1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adherence to swallowing rehabilitation exercises is important to develop and maintain functional improvement, yet more than half of head and neck cancer (HNC) patients report having difficulty adhering to prescribed regimens. Health apps with game elements have been used in other health domains to motivate and engage patients. Understanding the factors that impact adherence may allow for more effective gamified solutions.Entities:
Keywords: app design; dysphagia; games for health; gamification; head and neck cancer; mHealth; mobile health; patient adherence; patient engagement
Year: 2017 PMID: 28582245 PMCID: PMC5454563 DOI: 10.2196/rehab.6319
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol ISSN: 2369-2529
Figure 1Screenshots of design concepts for visual biofeedback, distinguished across 2 features: the type of visuals (simple, complex, abstract), and the presence or absence of a character. An example for each of the swallow exercises was created for all 6 categories and explained to patients in a video.
Figure 2Fragment of notes taken during the analysis of convergent interviews. The following codes were used: (✓) participant agreed with issue; (✗) participant disagreed with issue; (-) participant did not raise this issue, or issue was not probed by clinician; (A) issue actively probed for by interviewer in subsequent set and participant agreed; (D) issue actively probed for by interviewer in subsequent set and participant disagreed; (U) issue actively probed for by interviewer in subsequent set and participant undecided or gave contradicting statements throughout the interview; (.) not a converging theme from previous set and not specifically probed for by interviewer. Highlighted issues were deemed convergent.
Participant information.
| Sexa | Age | T-stage | Education | Annual household income (Can $) | Dysphagia history | Past swallowing therapy |
| Female | 45 | T2 | University | > 80,000 | 8 months | Yes |
| Male | 64 | T1 | High school | < 20,000 | 7 years | No |
| Male | 57 | Tx | College | (left blank) | 6 months | Yes |
| Male | 66 | T1 | College | > 80,000 | Not applicable | Yes |
| Female | 61 | T2 | High school | 60,000-79,999 | 5 years | Yes |
| Female | 60 | T2 | University | > 80,000 | 8 years | Yes |
| Male | 70 | T3 | University | (left blank) | 5 years | Yes |
| Female | 68 | T4 | (left blank) | (left blank) | 1 year 2 months | Yes |
| Male | 60 | T3 | High school | < 20,000 | 16 years 3 months | Yes |
| Male | 50 | T2 | College | > 80,000 | 7 years 10 months | Yes |
Summary of facilitators and barriers to adherence identified in each theme.
| Theme | Factor | Sample quote | |
| Perceived regression in function or fear of poor outcomes | “I need to work harder at it. And, because, I’ve already been pretty sick, I don’t want to get sick again.” | ||
| Perceived benefit as a result of the exercise | “I did stick with it because I went, ‘Wow, I’d do this.’ Any improvement in swallowing, being able to maybe eat a little faster cuz it’s going down quicker, I want. I really want it.” | ||
| No swallowing problem or restored function | “I told myself, oh I’m in the clear!” | ||
| Perceived little or no progress | “I don’t see any more progress, I’m not doing this anymore.” | ||
| Unrealistic postcancer treatment outcome expectations | “(...) you realize okay well this is gonna take time.” | ||
| Pessimistic adjustment in outcome expectations | “I just resigned myself to the fact that I don’t think my situation is really gonna change.” | ||
| Education | “Now, now I see where you-, what you’re getting at, when you invent these exercises.” | ||
| Building confidence | “I was always second-guessing really my technique. So I found the technique a little bit difficult to actually maintain. Um, especially after (...) I would leave the in-house session and try to do them at home.” | ||
| Tailored prescriptions | “But she said if it’s too difficult and you find an issue then just at least continue on with the other ones. Just don’t stop” | ||
| Accountability | “(...) you slide into bad habits pretty fast. If you’re not constantly monitored.” | ||
| Access | “So so if I was doing something wrong, I didn’t have the feedback to tell me try this or try that. I had to wait till my next appointment.” | ||
| Memory and focus | “I’d get home and you’d hand it to me, like do this, this and this, and I’d go, ‘Well that’s so simple’ Good God. And I’d get home and go (face palm) ‘What, what (...) oh man, I don’t remember, I don’t know what this means, and I’m not gonna phone because this is grade 3 instructions’ know what I mean?” | ||
| Sense of overwhelm with information and recommendations | “(...) this type of cancer is very complex in its requirements for support and therapy, yeah, some days, it’s just like whoa, it’s a lot to keep on track, I can’t keep it all up.” | ||
| Low energy and fatigue | “So sometimes all I had time for or energy in the day was a 1 hour visit with somebody. Maybe half an hour only. And then exercises, even eating sometimes would fall off because I wanted to go nap and sleep.” | ||
| Other side effects | “You’re tired. You’re tired of choking. You’re miserable. You’re isolated. You can’t communicate as it is except by writing a lot of places. Like for months. After the radiation burns your throat and that, it makes it harder to swallow, your throat’s raw. For so many reasons that make it easy not to, to swallow. And to take the food, there’s just an endless list of reasons why you can say, ‘Well, it’s too hard!’” | ||
| General: tracking progress, providing reminders, routine, setting goals | “So then I was tracking my swallow exercises at home, which, yeah, helped, I think. Helped to motivate me, to remind me that those were really critical. And helped me to also track how was how well I was doing.” | ||
| Patient-specific: adjusting the practice environment, customizing the exercise schedule | “At first, I’d get up in the morning and do them, kind of when I did my meds and stuff and try and get rid of all that at the same time.” | ||
| Exercise-specific: novel, interesting, easy, tackle multiple goals at once | “(...) but some of the ones were very unique, so there (were) more complex ones where you held (...) your breath. I thought, ‘Oh, actually this is kind of cool’ So it was kind of intriguing for a while.” | ||
| General: no structure, distractions, length of time in rehabilitation program | “(...) But it’s not official, it’s not regimented, it’s not programmed (...)” | ||
| Exercise-specific: too complex or difficult, feeling self-conscious, misinterpreting other activities as exercise | “(...) but after a while the complex ones fell off rather quickly” | ||
| Positive and grateful | “But then after I started feeling better again, then I thought, ‘Well, the rest of me is getting better, this part might as well come along too’ so, I kind of got back into doing them a little more.” | ||
| Coping, through self-talk and self-compassion | “I would think, ‘Just stop, stop whining, get get up and get better’”. | ||
| Sense of personal obligation to health care workers involved in extended treatment | “The thing is to (...) keep it in your mind that the surgeons and the therapists and the nurses and the whoever are the ones that are the reason why you’re here. And you owe it to them and to yourself to, (unintelligible) and to be strong (...).” | ||
| Wish to become a role model or helper | “I think more like, I want to be a role model for my friends. Yeah. I want to show them that if you put your mind to it, you can do it.” | ||
| Patient perceives his or her function to be better than that of peers | “It’s not fair, but then there’s others where, like there’s for example the guy that can only eat cream of wheat, I’m going ‘Wow, I’m miles ahead of him!’” | ||
| Patient perceives his or her function to be worse than that of peers | “(...) and it got really depressing, because all these people they would be put on the peg, taken off the peg, off they go. New norm! (...) and they would come in and, ‘Today I ate half a hamburger!’ Well, I ate my first half of hamburger the other day. And this was within 3 months of their treatment (...).” | ||
Convergent themes.
| Key issue | Agreed | Disagreed | Undecided or not addressed |
| Feedback should only show amount of effort (not too much information) | 4 | 3 | 3 |
| Feedback should be immediate | 6 | 0 | 4 |
| Feedback should be contingent on effort, but also show progress relative to goal | 5 | 2 | 3 |
| Feedback should be simple and straightforward | 7 | 0 | 3 |
| Third person player feedback is not a good measure of what is happening | 5 | 2 | 3 |
| Third person player feedback does not make it obvious if user completed exercise correctly | 4 | 2 | 4 |
| Education is important to get patients to do the exercises | 6 | 1 | 3 |
| Visuals that look medical do not look good (eg, graphs) | 2 | 5 | 3 |
| Visuals that are more complex are better that those that are too simple | 4 | 4 | 3 |
| Graphs are difficult to interpret | 1 | 5 | 4 |
| Artistic creations using biofeedback were nice, but too soft and boring | 3 | 0 | 7 |
| Completing the number of swallow trials is important | 3 | 5 | 2 |
| Built-in reminders are beneficial; patients have a lot of time demands | 2 | 2 | 6 |
| Failure motivates users to keep trying again and work harder | 4 | 3 | 3 |
| Improvement over time is important; building confidence in swallowing ability | 6 | 0 | 4 |
| Building structures over time is engaging | 5 | 2 | 3 |
| Concern expressed for third person player in the game | 1 | 7 | 2 |
| Third person player game is engaging | 3 | 4 | 3 |
| Tracking progress over time is important | 8 | 1 | 1 |
| Tracking progress should include a baseline | 3 | 0 | 7 |
| Competition with self is better than that with others | 5 | 0 | 5 |