| Literature DB >> 29500157 |
Neill B Baskerville1, Laura L Struik1, Darly Dash2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emerging evidence supports the use of smartphone apps for smoking cessation, especially in young adults given their high smoking rates and high smartphone ownership rates. Although evaluative evidence is encouraging for supporting smoking cessation, there remains a paucity of research describing the design and development processes of mobile health (mHealth) interventions.Entities:
Keywords: formative feedback; mobile app; smoking cessation; software design; young adult
Year: 2018 PMID: 29500157 PMCID: PMC5856923 DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.9011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Phase I: Listen—User preferences for features and content in a smoking cessation smartphone app.
| Theme and subtheme | Representative quote | |
| Supportive messaging | “So have positive feedback and stuff like that. Just positive feedback, not negative.” | |
| Receiving awards | “...if you’re like a week without smoking or something, it comes up and tells you [that] you’ve done a week without smoking, good job...” | |
| Comprehensive profile setup | “Yes, I like that it has all the questions...It knows how old you are, it know how much you smoke, it knows what you want to keep track of, what you don’t, it knows how much money you’re spending on cigarettes on a daily basis. I like that.” | |
| Adding a personal touch | “Like [upload] a photo of your kid if you’re trying to quit for your kid.” | |
| Social networking | “I like that idea...I’m not one to have everything on Facebook, but if it was something that I was proud of myself for, which would be quitting smoking, yeah, I’d like everyone to...acknowledge that.” | |
| Networking with other app users | “...maybe within the app have a network of everyone who is using the app and then that way anyone that you’re reaching out to is going to know exactly what you’re going through...” | |
| Quit buddy | “I think that’s good to have someone there that knows what’s going on.” | |
| Craving distractions | “I’d say, let’s say you get a craving right? You go into your phone and you whip out the app and you push a button and it gives you like a quick tip...like have a mint, have a sip of water something like that.” | |
| Immediate, live support | “I think that quick support thing is a good idea because if you’re talking with someone about your craving you’re probably not going to be having a cigarette while doing it.” | |
| Flexible quit approach | “The more options you can give the person who’s trying to quit, the better, whether they want to quit by themselves or quit today or quit 2 weeks from now or even a year from now. They should have that choice.” | |
| Identifying triggers | “I would use it to track...my cigarettes when I’m wanting to quit. Because I was looking for an efficient way to do that and I was actually carrying around a little pocket book for a while just so I could see. Because that’s where you have to start. That’s where I had to start anyway. So I definitely would use it in the planning stages to say like okay, I’m smoking now with who, what time and why.” | |
| Smoking frequency | “I don’t keep track of how many I smoke. I just assume, so if I was to keep track I’d probably be shocked. Yeah, this would be really helpful.” | |
| Money saved | “Just because [money is] the most pressing on a day-to-day [basis]...You can see [money] coming out of your bank account on a daily basis...so it’s very easy to keep track of how much you would be saving...it’s an immediate thing.” | |
| Health benefit | “Yeah, the whole after 10 minutes of not smoking, you’re back to whatever [health], after 10 days of not smoking, back to this. Have a little timeline of what you’re doing so you can actually see the benefits of not smoking.” | |
Figure 1Phase II—example of storyboarding session results.
Phase III: Do—Thoughts and opinions from Crush the Crave (CTC) pilot test focus groups.
| Feature and feedback type | Representative quote | ||
| User opinion | “[It’s] fun and interactive. It’s almost like an old-school video game where it’s like, ‘You’ve unlocked this!’” | ||
| “I find it’s good because after so many days it takes time and it shows you. You see the savings of $1,000...and you see how much value there is and how much money you’ve saved.” | |||
| Suggested improvements | “Money is nice, and then you also show material things based on personal likes. You could have bought PlayStation 3. You saved enough to buy a PlayStation 3. If you didn’t smoke all these days, you could have bought that. Show them a picture of it, too. Again, people are visual. If you allow them to see, good.” | ||
| “So for people that are quitting for financial reasons it might be nice to be able to set up an alert at the end of the day saying “Way to go. You just saved ten bucks” so that I don’t have to maybe look at it. That little extra high five.” | |||
| User opinion | “I know a lot of people who have quit and they always post on Facebook about it, and then they get their friends to support them. They’re like, oh me too, and they have conversations about it and talk over.” | ||
| “Facebook...It’s like, ‘Oh, first day of quitting. This sucks.’ And people are just like, ‘Oh, you’ll get through it, man.’ Just having your friends to support you while you’re doing that I think is helpful if you want that kind of connection.” | |||
| Suggested improvements | “If it’s more of an anonymous forum where you can just kind of say, ‘I’m really stressed out and smoking,’ as opposed to calling somebody up and talking to them, I might be inclined to use a forum...whereas Facebook, the quitter’s line or the call buddy, realistically, I’m never going to use that, so this would be an outlet perhaps that I might.” | ||
| User opinion | “It gives you a better idea of when you’re smoking most often and then you can figure out if you’re in those places hopefully not to smoke.” | ||
| “I find it’s good. A lot of people don’t understand why they smoke and in what situations and in the other screen it tells you, how do you feel and perhaps you don’t need to hang out with friends.” | |||
| “It gives a reminder, always in your face, so it really makes you realize, especially the saving money part. You could go out and buy a pack of smokes and then think nothing of it, but if it’s counting up how much money you’re spending, it’s like really eye opening.” | |||
| Suggested improvements | “...so now that I know my triggers are...and then what? If it continues to happen, what do I do? Just looking at it a couple of times a day is the same thing. A line graph would be a lot easier to read when you’re seeing your spikes. A bar graph...just shows volume...it’s like well, when during the day did you have 10 smokes? Did you have 10 smokes in 15 minutes, did you have 10 smokes in 15 hours?” | ||
| User opinion | “It goes directly to the games, I like that on my telephone. I can go on Facebook or Twitter [directly]. When I’m on Facebook or Twitter you think about something else. I think it’s a super good idea.” | ||
| “I also really liked how much information there was. The fact that it was in point form, it’s easy to read. It wasn’t long paragraphs, it was just the key points, and then if you wanted to learn more, you could go out on your own and look it up. I thought that was a good idea, because I wouldn’t read it if I saw a huge paragraph.” | |||
| Suggested improvements | “[Suggest] distractions in my area kind of thing, stuff to do, whether it be like go to the mall or the nature museum...Something other than I’m going to sit here with my phone and bugger around with my phone all day. Go get added distraction[s] from outside and stuff.” | ||
| “To have almost like a glossary page with all the different information and everything right there at my fingertips I think I’d be more likely to use that. Just in regards to the app itself it’s kind of the 1 page that is really jammed with stuff. Every other page is really, really simple.” | |||
| “It’s not that it was too much; it was that it was, like it comes at you like a jumble. You can organize or index it somehow.” | |||
Figure 2Evidence-informed design components of Crush the Crave (CTC).
Figure 3Sample screenshots of Crush the Crave (CTC).
User behavior associated with Crush the Crave (CTC) app pages—July 2013 to June 2014.
| Page | Topic | Page views | Unique Page views | Average time on page (min) | Entrances | Bounce rate (%) | Exits (%) |
| All pages | OVERALL | 59,384 | 40,087 | 1:04 | 18,567 | 58.63 | 32.27 |
| /homepage | Home page | 13,165 | 8193 | 1:16 | 3,977 | 55.02 | 32.51 |
| /quitHelppage | Quit help pages | 5232 | 1219 | 0:31 | 383 | 8.88 | 10.07 |
| /progressPage | Charting Progress | 4770 | 3341 | 1:00 | 1176 | 53.23 | 26.21 |
| /smoked | Smoke messaging | 4153 | 2847 | 4:17 | 591 | 55.16 | 41.70 |
| /morePage | More features | 3971 | 2422 | 1:15 | 1114 | 62.48 | 32.21 |
| /awardsPage | Awards received | 3260 | 2328 | 0:49 | 919 | 66.70 | 32.09 |
| /craved | Crave messaging | 1927 | 1520 | 1:19 | 153 | 28.10 | 19.72 |
| /locationPage | Location of smoking | 1647 | 1154 | 0:04 | 124 | —a | 1.88 |
| /triggersPage | Smoking triggers | 1096 | 819 | 1:50 | 14 | — | 21.35 |
| /distractMePage | Craving distractions | 778 | 677 | 3:06 | 2 | — | 46.27 |
| /quitlne | Quitline number page | 131 | 118 | 1:26 | 1 | — | 14.5 |
| /shareaward | Share an award on Facebook | 32 | 19 | 0:13 | 3 | — | 28.12 |
aData is not applicable.