Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome

Objective: This study aimed to design, develop, assess and refine the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians (PCP) and patients with metabolic syndrome (MetS) in primary care. Methodology: Using the software-development-life-cycle (SDLC) iterative model, storyboard...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Digital Health
Main Author: Daud M.H.; Yusoff F.H.; Abdul-Razak S.; Baharudin N.; Mohamed-Yassin M.-S.; Badlishah-Sham S.F.; Nikmat A.W.; Isa M.R.; Jamil N.; Nawawi H.; Ramli A.S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications Inc. 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85161291481&doi=10.1177%2f20552076231176645&partnerID=40&md5=5e09d3a247886648478f96026dfd7c00
id 2-s2.0-85161291481
spelling 2-s2.0-85161291481
Daud M.H.; Yusoff F.H.; Abdul-Razak S.; Baharudin N.; Mohamed-Yassin M.-S.; Badlishah-Sham S.F.; Nikmat A.W.; Isa M.R.; Jamil N.; Nawawi H.; Ramli A.S.
Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome
2023
Digital Health
9

10.1177/20552076231176645
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85161291481&doi=10.1177%2f20552076231176645&partnerID=40&md5=5e09d3a247886648478f96026dfd7c00
Objective: This study aimed to design, develop, assess and refine the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians (PCP) and patients with metabolic syndrome (MetS) in primary care. Methodology: Using the software-development-life-cycle (SDLC) iterative model, storyboard and wireframe were drafted; and a mock prototype was designed to illustrate the content and function graphically. Subsequently, a working prototype was developed. Qualitative studies using the ‘think-aloud’ and cognitive-task-analysis methods were conducted for the utility and usability testing. Topic guide was based on the 10-Nielsen's-Heuristic-Principles. Utility testing was conducted among PCP in which they ‘thought-aloud’ while performing tasks using the mobile app. Usability testing was conducted among MetS patients after they were given the app for 3 weeks. They ‘thought-aloud’ while performing tasks using the app. Interviews were audio- and video-recorded, and transcribed verbatim. Thematic content analysis was performed. Result: Seven PCP and nine patients participated in the utility and usability testing, respectively. Six themes (efficiency of use, user control and freedom, appearance and aesthetic features, clinical content, error prevention, and help and documentation) emerged. PCP found the mobile app attractive and relevant sections were easy to find. They suggested adding ‘zoom/swipe’ functions and some parts needed bigger fonts. Patients commented that the app was user-friendly, has nice interface, and straightforward language. It helped them understand their health better. Based on these findings, the mobile app was refined. Conclusion: This app was produced using a robust SDLC method to increase users’ satisfaction and sustainability of its use. It could potentially improve self-management behaviour among MetS patients in primary care. © The Author(s) 2023.
SAGE Publications Inc.
20552076
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access; Green Open Access
author Daud M.H.; Yusoff F.H.; Abdul-Razak S.; Baharudin N.; Mohamed-Yassin M.-S.; Badlishah-Sham S.F.; Nikmat A.W.; Isa M.R.; Jamil N.; Nawawi H.; Ramli A.S.
spellingShingle Daud M.H.; Yusoff F.H.; Abdul-Razak S.; Baharudin N.; Mohamed-Yassin M.-S.; Badlishah-Sham S.F.; Nikmat A.W.; Isa M.R.; Jamil N.; Nawawi H.; Ramli A.S.
Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome
author_facet Daud M.H.; Yusoff F.H.; Abdul-Razak S.; Baharudin N.; Mohamed-Yassin M.-S.; Badlishah-Sham S.F.; Nikmat A.W.; Isa M.R.; Jamil N.; Nawawi H.; Ramli A.S.
author_sort Daud M.H.; Yusoff F.H.; Abdul-Razak S.; Baharudin N.; Mohamed-Yassin M.-S.; Badlishah-Sham S.F.; Nikmat A.W.; Isa M.R.; Jamil N.; Nawawi H.; Ramli A.S.
title Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome
title_short Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome
title_full Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome
title_fullStr Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome
title_sort Design, development, utility and usability testing of the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians and patients with metabolic syndrome
publishDate 2023
container_title Digital Health
container_volume 9
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1177/20552076231176645
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85161291481&doi=10.1177%2f20552076231176645&partnerID=40&md5=5e09d3a247886648478f96026dfd7c00
description Objective: This study aimed to design, develop, assess and refine the EMPOWER-SUSTAIN Self-Management Mobile App© among primary care physicians (PCP) and patients with metabolic syndrome (MetS) in primary care. Methodology: Using the software-development-life-cycle (SDLC) iterative model, storyboard and wireframe were drafted; and a mock prototype was designed to illustrate the content and function graphically. Subsequently, a working prototype was developed. Qualitative studies using the ‘think-aloud’ and cognitive-task-analysis methods were conducted for the utility and usability testing. Topic guide was based on the 10-Nielsen's-Heuristic-Principles. Utility testing was conducted among PCP in which they ‘thought-aloud’ while performing tasks using the mobile app. Usability testing was conducted among MetS patients after they were given the app for 3 weeks. They ‘thought-aloud’ while performing tasks using the app. Interviews were audio- and video-recorded, and transcribed verbatim. Thematic content analysis was performed. Result: Seven PCP and nine patients participated in the utility and usability testing, respectively. Six themes (efficiency of use, user control and freedom, appearance and aesthetic features, clinical content, error prevention, and help and documentation) emerged. PCP found the mobile app attractive and relevant sections were easy to find. They suggested adding ‘zoom/swipe’ functions and some parts needed bigger fonts. Patients commented that the app was user-friendly, has nice interface, and straightforward language. It helped them understand their health better. Based on these findings, the mobile app was refined. Conclusion: This app was produced using a robust SDLC method to increase users’ satisfaction and sustainability of its use. It could potentially improve self-management behaviour among MetS patients in primary care. © The Author(s) 2023.
publisher SAGE Publications Inc.
issn 20552076
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access; Green Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809677683844448256