Avila-Garcia Patricia, Hernandez-Ramos Rosa, Nouri Sarah S, Cemballi Anupama, Sarkar Urmimala, Lyles Courtney R, Aguilera Adrian
School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
JAMIA Open. 2019 Oct 11;2(4):489-497. doi: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooz049. eCollection 2019 Dec.
Text-messaging interventions are a promising approach to increasing physical activity in vulnerable populations. To better inform the development of a text-messaging intervention, we sought to identify barriers and facilitators to using text messaging and engaging in physical activity among patients with diabetes and comorbid depression.
We conducted interviews with primary care patients at a safety-net health care system (=26). Data were collected at 3 stages, including a focus group (stage 1), and individual interviews (stage 2 and 3). Patients in stage 1 and 2 previously participated in a text-messaging intervention as part of depression treatment. Discussions focused on participant experience of previously using a text-messaging intervention, influences and perceptions of physical activity, and mobile phone use. We analyzed all transcripts for emerging themes.
Participants were 56.2 years (±9.7); 69.2% were female, 65.4% identified as Hispanic/Latino(a), and 46.2% reported having less than a high school education. All had depression and 61.5% had diabetes. Specific barriers that emerged included low literacy and only basic use of mobile phones in everyday life, in combination with a high prevalence of comorbid health conditions and limited mobility. These were each addressed with a specific content or intervention delivery change in the overall intervention design.
Conducting a focus group and individual interviews with end users of an mHealth intervention under development has implications for tailoring and modifying components of the content and format to ensure that the final intervention will engage end users most effectively.
短信干预是一种在弱势群体中增加身体活动的有前景的方法。为了更好地为短信干预的开发提供信息,我们试图确定糖尿病合并抑郁症患者使用短信及进行身体活动的障碍和促进因素。
我们在一个安全网医疗系统对初级保健患者进行了访谈(n = 26)。在3个阶段收集数据,包括焦点小组(第1阶段)和个体访谈(第2阶段和第3阶段)。第1阶段和第2阶段的患者之前作为抑郁症治疗的一部分参与了短信干预。讨论聚焦于参与者之前使用短信干预的体验、身体活动的影响和认知以及手机使用情况。我们分析了所有转录本以找出新出现的主题。
参与者的年龄为56.2岁(±9.7);69.2%为女性,65.4%为西班牙裔/拉丁裔,46.2%报告受教育程度低于高中。所有人都患有抑郁症,61.5%患有糖尿病。出现的具体障碍包括低识字率、日常生活中仅基本使用手机,同时合并健康状况的患病率高且行动不便。在总体干预设计中,针对这些情况分别进行了特定的内容或干预交付方式的改变。
对正在开发的移动健康干预的最终用户进行焦点小组和个体访谈,对于调整和修改内容及形式的组成部分具有重要意义,以确保最终干预能最有效地吸引最终用户。