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Guidelines and Recommendations for Developing Interactive eHealth Apps for Complex Messaging in Health Promotion

Authors :
Heffernan, Kayla Joanne
Chang, Shanton
Maclean, Skye Tamara
Callegari, Emma Teresa
Garland, Suzanne Marie
Reavley, Nicola Jane
Varigos, George Andrew
Wark, John Dennis
Source :
JMIR mHealth and uHealth, Vol 4, Iss 1, p e14 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
JMIR Publications, 2016.

Abstract

BackgroundThe now ubiquitous catchphrase, “There’s an app for that,” rings true owing to the growing number of mobile phone apps. In excess of 97,000 eHealth apps are available in major app stores. Yet the effectiveness of these apps varies greatly. While a minority of apps are developed grounded in theory and in conjunction with health care experts, the vast majority are not. This is concerning given the Hippocratic notion of “do no harm.” There is currently no unified formal theory for developing interactive eHealth apps, and development is especially difficult when complex messaging is required, such as in health promotion and prevention. ObjectiveThis paper aims to provide insight into the creation of interactive eHealth apps for complex messaging, by leveraging the Safe-D case study, which involved complex messaging required to guide safe but sufficient UV exposure for vitamin D synthesis in users. We aim to create recommendations for developing interactive eHealth apps for complex messages based on the lessons learned during Safe-D app development. MethodsFor this case study we developed an Apple and Android app, both named Safe-D, to safely improve vitamin D status in young women through encouraging safe ultraviolet radiation exposure. The app was developed through participatory action research involving medical and human computer interaction researchers, subject matter expert clinicians, external developers, and target users. The recommendations for development were created from analysis of the development process. ResultsBy working with clinicians and implementing disparate design examples from the literature, we developed the Safe-D app. From this development process, recommendations for developing interactive eHealth apps for complex messaging were created: (1) involve a multidisciplinary team in the development process, (2) manage complex messages to engage users, and (3) design for interactivity (tailor recommendations, remove barriers to use, design for simplicity). ConclusionsThis research has provided principles for developing interactive eHealth apps for complex messaging as guidelines by aggregating existing design concepts and expanding these concepts and new learnings from our development process. A set of guidelines to develop interactive eHealth apps generally, and specifically those for complex messaging, was previously missing from the literature; this research has contributed these principles. Safe-D delivers complex messaging simply, to aid education, and explicitly, considering user safety.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22915222
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.226f94bdcf8f4b068b251b0a0fd168b8
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/mhealth.4423