| Literature DB >> 34779780 |
Katie Whale1, Lucy Beasant1, Anne J Wright2, Lucy Yardley3,4, Louise M Wallace5, Louise Moody6, Carol Joinson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Daytime urinary incontinence (UI) is common in childhood and often persists into adolescence. UI in adolescence is associated with a range of adverse outcomes, including depressive symptoms, peer victimization, poor self-image, and problems with peer relationships. The first-line conservative treatment for UI is bladder training (standard urotherapy) that aims to establish a regular fluid intake and a timed schedule for toilet visits. The success of bladder training is strongly dependent on good concordance, which can be challenging for young people.Entities:
Keywords: child health; digital intervention; incontinence; intervention development; mobile phone; pediatric; pediatric incontinence; smartphone; urinary incontinence
Year: 2021 PMID: 34779780 PMCID: PMC8663506 DOI: 10.2196/26212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Pediatr Parent ISSN: 2561-6722
Figure 1Flow diagram of the methods sequence.
Demographic characteristics of the young people involved in the app development.
| Participant ID | Age (years) | Gender | App development stage |
| W1 | 13 | Female | Workshops 1, 2, and 3 |
| W2 | 10 | Female | Workshops 1, 2, and 3 |
| W3 | 12 | Male | Workshop 2 |
| W4 | 10 | Male | Workshop 3 |
| W5 | 17 | Male | Workshops 2 and 3 |
| W6 | 12 | Female | Workshop 1 |
| W7 | 17 | Female | Workshop 1 |
| W8 | 15 | Female | Workshops 2 and 3 |
| W9 | 14 | Male | Workshop 2 |
| W10 | 12 | Female | Workshops 1, 2, and 3 |
| W11 | 11 | Female | Workshop 3 |
| P2 | 18 | Female | TAa, RLTb, and IDIc |
| P5 | 11 | Male | TA |
| P6 | 13 | Male | TA, RLT, IDI |
| P8 | 19 | Female | TA |
| P10 | 11 | Male | TA, RLT, IDI |
| P11 | 18 | Male | TA, RLT, IDI |
| P13 | 12 | Female | TA, RLT |
| P14 | 14 | Female | TA, RLT, IDI |
| P22 | 12 | Female | TA, RLT |
| P23 | 11 | Female | RLT, IDI |
| P26 | 12 | Female | RLT, IDI |
| P27 | 11 | Female | TA, RLT |
aTA: think aloud.
bRLT: real-life testing.
cIDI: In-depth interview.
Description of the professional background of the clinicians.
| Participant | Role |
| Clinician 1 | Clinical nurse specialist |
| Clinician 2 | GPa |
| Clinician 3 | Clinical nurse specialist |
| Clinician 4 | School nurse |
| Clinician 5 | Children’s specialist nurse |
| Clinician 6 | Pediatric bowel and bladder care service clinical and professional lead |
| Clinician 7 | Consultant urologist |
| Clinician 8 | Clinical nurse specialist |
aGP: general practitioner.
Figure 2Workshop 1 example.
Figure 3Workshop 2 example.
Figure 4Wireframe example.
Table of changes for the coding framework.
| Code | Full form | Meaning |
| IMP | Important for behavior change | This is an important change that is likely to affect behavior change or a precursor to behavior change (eg, acceptability, feasibility, persuasiveness, motivation, and engagement) or is in line with the logic model or with the guiding principles. For example, participants appear unconvinced by an aspect of the intervention, so you decide to add motivational examples. |
| EAS | Easy and uncontroversial | An easy and feasible change that does not involve any major design changes; for example, a participant was unsure of a technical term, so you add a definition. |
| REP | Repeatedly | This was said repeatedly by >1 participant. |
| EXP | Experience | This is supported by experience. Please specify what kind of experience; for example, patient and public involvement members agree this would be an appropriate change, and experts (eg, clinicians on your development team) agree that this would be an appropriate change. This is supported by evidence in the literature. |
| NCON | Does not contradict | This does not contradict experience (eg, evidence) or the logic model or the guiding principles. |
| NC | Not changed | It was decided not to make this change. Please explain why (eg, it would not be feasible or only one person said this). |
Summary of the final app modifications.
| App function area | App modification |
| Recording new drinks | Pop-up message to explain how to pull down the fluid level on first use |
| Adding new drinks | Making the option to change the time of drink more obvious |
| Daily diary | Free text option for recording notes |
| Settings/about | Add a PDF link to instruction manual |
| Background and information pages | Reformat and reduce amount of text |
| Wees | Change leak text to include incontinence pad users |
| Poos | Pop-up with more information on stool consistency |
| Task center | Pulsing red button on home page to make this more obvious |
| Drinking goal feedback | Show goal completion over 100% if the user has exceeded their daily drinking goal |