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Quality benchmarking of smartphone laboratory medicine applications: Comparison of laboratory medicine specialists' and non-laboratory medicine professionals' evaluation

Authors :
Jovičić, Snežana
Jovičić, Snežana
Siodmiak, Joanna
Alcorta, Marta Duque
Kittel, Maximillian
Oosterhuis, Wytze
Aakre, Kristin Moberg
Jørgensen, Per
Palicka, Vladimir
Kutt, Marge
Anttonen, Mikko
Georgieva Velizarova, Mileva
Marc, Jania
Jovičić, Snežana
Jovičić, Snežana
Siodmiak, Joanna
Alcorta, Marta Duque
Kittel, Maximillian
Oosterhuis, Wytze
Aakre, Kristin Moberg
Jørgensen, Per
Palicka, Vladimir
Kutt, Marge
Anttonen, Mikko
Georgieva Velizarova, Mileva
Marc, Jania
Source :
Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

There are many mobile health applications (apps) now available and some that use in some way laboratory medicine data. Among them, patient-oriented are of the lowest content quality. The aim of this study was to compare the opinions of non-laboratory medicine professionals (NLMP) with those of laboratory medicine specialists (LMS) and define the benchmarks for quality assessment of laboratory medicine apps. Twenty-five volunteers from six European countries evaluated 16 selected patient-oriented apps. Participants were 20-60 years old, 44% were females, with different educational degrees, and no professional involvement in laboratory medicine. Each participant completed a questionnaire based on the Mobile Application Rating Scale (MARS) and the System Usability Scale, as previously used for rating the app quality by LMS. The responses from the two groups were compared using the Mann-Whitney U test and Spearman correlation. The median total score of NLMP app evaluation was 2.73 out of 5 (IQR 0.95) compared to 3.78 (IQR 1.05) by the LMS. All scores were statistically significantly lower in the NLMP group (p<0.05), except for the item Information quality (p=0.1631). The suggested benchmarks for a useful appear: increasing awareness of the importance and delivering an understanding of persons' own laboratory test results; understandable terminology; easy to use; appropriate graphic design, and trustworthy information. NLMP' evaluation confirmed the low utility of currently available laboratory medicine apps. A reliable app should contain trustworthy and understandable information. The appearance of an app should be fit for purpose and easy to use.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
Notes :
Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1277282775
Document Type :
Electronic Resource