Dening Jedha, George Elena S, Ball Kylie, Islam Sheikh Mohammed Shariful
Institute for Physical Activity and Nutrition, School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Deakin University, Locked Bag 20000, Geelong, Victoria 3220, Australia.
Internet Interv. 2022 Feb 12;28:100505. doi: 10.1016/j.invent.2022.100505. eCollection 2022 Apr.
Web-based interventions can help address challenges of accessibility and availability of dietary support for people with type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, concerns regarding adherence and engagement in web-based interventions have been noted. Implementing a user-centered approach to intervention development has been shown to encourage better participant engagement. The overarching aim of this paper was to describe the user-centered approach used in the T2Diet Study to develop a new web-based dietary intervention for adults with T2D, exploring strategies for enhancing adherence and engagement.
Intervention development was based on a flexible iterative user-centered approach to enable new product development. Twenty-one adults with T2D were engaged in six guided discussion groups across four iterative development phases, alongside reference to evidence and theory throughout the process. The phases of user inquiry progressed from broad discussion on areas to support dietary needs; to design feedback on aspects of site layout; through to further feedback on aesthetics and functionality; then into a two-week field test followed by final user inquiry and participation in user experience polls. A hybrid approach of thematic data analysis was used, incorporating both a data-driven inductive approach and a deductive approach based on a priori identification of themes.
Group discussion across the four phases highlighted factors the participants considered may motivate them to adhere and engage, which predominantly included relevance of resources, clear and simple positive communication, and flexibility for personal tailoring. Participant feedback provided an actionable list of intervention developments and input to inform intervention structure and theoretical framework. The two-week field test highlighted factors participants valued in terms of the user experience, most notably usability and accessibility. Additionally, the field test indicated a positive user experience, with no significant usability issues identified.
This paper provided the first detailed report of a user-centered approach to iterative development in the context of a web-based T2D dietary intervention. The insights will be useful to inform future digitally-delivered dietary interventions for adults with T2D or to inform a similar user-centered approach for other chronic health conditions.
基于网络的干预措施有助于应对2型糖尿病(T2D)患者在获取饮食支持方面的可及性和可得性挑战。然而,人们已注意到对基于网络的干预措施的依从性和参与度存在担忧。事实证明,采用以用户为中心的方法进行干预开发能够促进更好的参与者参与度。本文的总体目标是描述T2Diet研究中采用的以用户为中心的方法,该方法用于为成年T2D患者开发一种新的基于网络的饮食干预措施,探索提高依从性和参与度的策略。
干预措施的开发基于一种灵活的迭代式以用户为中心的方法,以实现新产品的开发。21名成年T2D患者参与了四个迭代开发阶段的六个引导式讨论小组,在此过程中始终参考证据和理论。用户调研阶段从关于支持饮食需求领域的广泛讨论开始;到对网站布局方面的设计反馈;再到对美学和功能的进一步反馈;然后进入为期两周的实地测试,随后进行最终用户调研并参与用户体验调查。采用了一种混合的主题数据分析方法,既包括数据驱动的归纳法,也包括基于预先确定主题的演绎法。
四个阶段的小组讨论突出了参与者认为可能促使他们坚持并参与的因素,这些因素主要包括资源的相关性、清晰简单的积极沟通以及个人定制的灵活性。参与者的反馈提供了一份关于干预措施开发的可操作清单,并为干预结构和理论框架提供了参考意见。为期两周的实地测试突出了参与者在用户体验方面重视的因素,最显著的是可用性和可及性。此外,实地测试表明用户体验良好,未发现重大可用性问题。
本文首次详细报告了在基于网络的T2D饮食干预背景下以用户为中心的迭代开发方法。这些见解将有助于为未来针对成年T2D患者的数字化饮食干预提供参考,或为其他慢性健康状况提供类似的以用户为中心的方法。