Literature DB >> 36201402

Usability and Acceptability of a Palliative Care Mobile Intervention for Older Adults With Heart Failure and Caregivers: Observational Study.

Jennifer Paola Villalobos1, Sheana Salyers Bull1, Jennifer Dickman Portz2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Heart failure is a leading cause of death among older adults. Digital health can increase access to and awareness of palliative care for patients with advanced heart failure and their caregivers. However, few palliative care digital interventions target heart failure or patients' caregivers, family, and friends, termed here as the social convoy. To address this need, the Social Convoy Palliative Care (Convoy-Pal) mobile intervention was developed to deliver self-management tools and palliative care resources to older adults with advanced heart failure and their social convoys.
OBJECTIVE: The goal of the research was to test the acceptability and usability of Convoy-Pal among older adults with advanced heart failure and their social convoys.
METHODS: Convoy-Pal includes tablet-based and smartwatch tools facilitating self-management and access to palliative care resources. Older adults and social convoy caregivers completed an acceptability and usability interview via Zoom, including open-ended questions and the Mobile Application Rating Scale: User Version (uMARS). Descriptive analysis was conducted to summarize the results of open-ended feedback and self-reported acceptability and usability.
RESULTS: A total of 26 participants (16 older adults and 10 social convoy caregivers) participated in the interview. Overall, the feedback from users was good (uMARS mean 3.96/5 [SD 0.81]). Both older adults and social convoy caregivers scored information provided by Convoy-Pal the highest (mean 4.22 [SD 0.75] and mean 4.21 [SD 0.64], respectively). Aesthetics, functionality, and engagement were also perceived as acceptable (mean >3.5). Open-ended feedback resulted in 5 themes including improvements to goal setting, monitoring tools, daily check-in call feature, portal and mobile app, and convoy assessment.
CONCLUSIONS: Convoy-Pal was perceived as acceptable with good usability among older adults with heart failure and their social convoy caregivers. With good acceptability, Convoy-Pal may ultimately lead to increased access to palliative care resources and facilitate self-management among older adults with heart failure and their social convoy caregivers. ©Jennifer Paola Villalobos, Sheana Salyers Bull, Jennifer Dickman Portz. Originally published in JMIR Aging (https://aging.jmir.org), 06.10.2022.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Convoy-Pal; adult; aging; app; cardiology; digital health; heart; heart failure; mHealth; mobile; older adult; palliative care; smartwatch; symptom; tablet

Year:  2022        PMID: 36201402      PMCID: PMC9585449          DOI: 10.2196/35592

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JMIR Aging        ISSN: 2561-7605


  31 in total

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Authors:  Salim S Virani; Alvaro Alonso; Hugo J Aparicio; Emelia J Benjamin; Marcio S Bittencourt; Clifton W Callaway; April P Carson; Alanna M Chamberlain; Susan Cheng; Francesca N Delling; Mitchell S V Elkind; Kelly R Evenson; Jane F Ferguson; Deepak K Gupta; Sadiya S Khan; Brett M Kissela; Kristen L Knutson; Chong D Lee; Tené T Lewis; Junxiu Liu; Matthew Shane Loop; Pamela L Lutsey; Jun Ma; Jason Mackey; Seth S Martin; David B Matchar; Michael E Mussolino; Sankar D Navaneethan; Amanda Marma Perak; Gregory A Roth; Zainab Samad; Gary M Satou; Emily B Schroeder; Svati H Shah; Christina M Shay; Andrew Stokes; Lisa B VanWagner; Nae-Yuh Wang; Connie W Tsao
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9.  A Mobile Health Intervention to Improve Self-Care in Patients With Heart Failure: Pilot Randomized Control Trial.

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