Exploring the barriers and facilitators for supporting adolescents with knee pains adherence to mobile health apps: A think-aloud study

Author:

Johansen Simon Kristoffer1ORCID,Kanstrup Anne Marie2,Thomsen Janus Laust1,Christensen Mads Norre1,Rathleff Michael Skovdal13

Affiliation:

1. Center for General Practice (CAM-AAU), Department of Clinical Medicine at Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark

2. The Rectorate, Aalborg University, Northern Jutland, Denmark

3. Department of Health Science and Technology, Faculty of Medicine, Aalborg University, Gistrup, Northern Jutland, Denmark

Abstract

Background Mobile health (mHealth) applications have the potential to support adolescents’ self-management of knee pain. However, ensuring adherence remains a barrier when designing mHealth concepts for adolescents. Objective This study aimed to explore barriers and facilitators for adhering to mHealth interventions to inform design principles. Methods Think-aloud tests were conducted with 12 adolescents (aged 12.5 years median) with knee pain, using a low-fidelity prototype. The prototype was informed by the authors previous work, rapid prototyping sessions with seven health professionals, and synthesis via the Behavioral Intervention Technology Model. The think-aloud tests were video recorded and analyzed thematically to identify design principles. Results The analysis based on user testing with adolescents with knee pain identified three themes: “user experience and feedback,” “contextual challenges,” and “new features” and nine subthemes. Adolescents were able to use mHealth behavioral features such as self-tracking, goal setting, education, and data visualization to capture and reflect on their knee pain developments, which facilitated use. However, adolescents struggle with timing interventions, breaking down management behaviors, and biases towards interventions were identified as internal threats to adherence. Competing activities, parental meddling, and privacy concerns were external adherence barriers. Twelve design principles were identified for integrating these insights into mHealth designs. Conclusion Participants’ motivations for adherence were influenced by internal and external factors. While adolescents were able to use mHealth behavioral features to capture and reflect on knee pain developments, understanding how to accommodate adolescents’ cognitive abilities, competing activities, and need for independence is quintessential to enhance adherence in everyday contexts.

Funder

Danish Research Foundation for General Practice

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics,Health Policy

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