| Literature DB >> 32207692 |
David-Zacharie Issom1,2, André Henriksen3, Ashenafi Zebene Woldaregay4, Jessica Rochat1,2, Christian Lovis1,2, Gunnar Hartvigsen4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a hematological genetic disease affecting over 25 million people worldwide. The main clinical manifestations of SCD, hemolytic anemia and vaso-occlusion, lead to chronic pain and organ damages. With recent advances in childhood care, high-income countries have seen SCD drift from a disease of early childhood mortality to a neglected chronic disease of adulthood. In particular, coordinated, preventive, and comprehensive care for adults with SCD is largely underresourced. Consequently, patients are left to self-manage. Mobile health (mHealth) apps for chronic disease self-management are now flooding app stores. However, evidence remains unclear about their effectiveness, and the literature indicates low user engagement and poor adoption rates. Finally, few apps have been developed for people with SCD and none encompasses their numerous and complex self-care management needs.Entities:
Keywords: adoption; health behavior; mHealth; motivation; patient engagement; persuasion; self-management; sickle cell disease; user computer interfaces; wearable devices
Year: 2020 PMID: 32207692 PMCID: PMC7139429 DOI: 10.2196/14599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Hum Factors ISSN: 2292-9495
Overview of the questions asked during the interviews.
| Themes | Questions |
| Preliminary questions |
What is most important for you in your life? If you had access to a new health technology, which purpose or features should it have? |
| Goals, expectations, and attitudes |
What motivates and demotivates you to access Web-based health information? What are the most difficult things about your self-care? What could help you become more autonomous with your self-care? |
| Electronic health literacy and data integration |
Have you ever used an app that collects health data? What factors would discourage you from using such an app? |
| Wearables and sensors |
What indication would you expect from wearable sensors for health self-monitoring? What is the most valuable indication you would want from devices collecting your data? |
| Data sharing |
What would you share with other patients, caregivers, and doctors and why? What feedback should be provided by the system? |
Distribution of characteristics of the studied sample (N=10).
| Characteristics of respondents | Value | |
| Gender, male, n (%) | 5 (50) | |
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| Mean (SD) | 35.6 (9.41) |
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| Median | 37 |
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| Switzerlanda | 7 (70)a |
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| Norway | 3 (30) |
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| Democratic Republic of the Congoa | 1 (10)a |
aOne respondent was partly residing in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and in Switzerland.
Overview of potential influencers of adoption through the capability, opportunity, motivation, and behavior (COM-B) lens.
| Requirement | Quotes | COM-B system | Type |
| Prevent crises by avoiding symptoms | 12 | Automatic motivation | Functional |
| Family and social community support (shareability) | 15 | Automatic motivation | Nonfunctional |
| Gain more control on disease through daily self-care support | 28 | Physical capability | Functional |
| Limit management | 9 | Physical capability | Functional |
| Importance of information trustworthiness | 17 | Physical opportunity | Nonfunctional |
| Invisibility or inconspicuousness | 9 | Physical opportunity | Nonfunctional |
| Similarity with messaging apps | 8 | Physical opportunity | Nonfunctional |
| Automatic reminders and automatability | 5 | Physical opportunity | Nonfunctional |
| Simplicity | 3 | Physical opportunity | Nonfunctional |
| Learn trigger factors | 14 | Psychological capability | Functional |
| Predict health outcomes | 11 | Psychological capability | Functional |
| Receive threshold alerts | 10 | Psychological capability | Functional |
| Feedback on self-care practices | 17 | Psychological capability | Nonfunctional |
| Customizable | 8 | Reflective motivation | Nonfunctional |
| Privacy | 4 | Reflective motivation | Nonfunctional |
| Learn what other patients do | 14 | Social opportunity | Functional |