Affiliation:
1. Division of Oncology, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA
2. University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA
3. Tennessee Department of Health, Nashville, TN, USA
4. Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Despite the promise of mobile health (mHealth), engagement is often too low for durable health behavior change, and little is known regarding why certain individuals abandon mHealth tools.
Purpose
Guided by a mHealth engagement framework, we evaluated contextual predictors of objective engagement with an app for adolescents and young adults (AYA) who survived cancer.
Methods
One hundred and ten AYA survivors (M age = 20.5, 43% female, 30% racial/ethnic minority) were randomized to receive a disease self-management app that delivered 1–2 tailored messages/day for 16 weeks, and contained a survivorship care plan (SCP). Demographic, disease, psychosocial, and setting characteristics were examined as predictors of three objective engagement outcomes: (a) % of active app days, (b) % of messages read, and (c) viewed SCP in the app versus not. A subsample (n = 10) completed qualitative interviews to further assess engagement barriers.
Results
Self-reported uninterrupted app access (β = −0.56, p < .001), iPhone (vs. Android) ownership (β = 0.30, p < .001), and receiving the intervention in the summer (β = −0.20, p = .01) predicted more active days. Lower depressed mood (β = −0.30, p = .047) and uninterrupted app access (β = −0.50, p < .001) predicted more messages read. Qualitatively, technical glitches and competing priorities were described as engagement barriers, whereas certain types of messages (e.g., health goal messages) were perceived as engaging. Among participants who had uninterrupted app access (n = 76), higher baseline motivation to change, better health perceptions, using the app during the summer, and iPhone ownership predicted higher engagement.
Conclusions
Findings demonstrate the importance of comprehensively assessing and planning for multi-level ecological determinants of mHealth engagement in future trials.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier
NCT03363711.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology
Cited by
15 articles.
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