Robles Maria Cielito, Newman Mark W, Doshi Aalap, Bailey Sarah, Huang Linde, Choi Soo Ji, Kurien Chris, Merid Beza, Cowdery Joan, Golbus Jessica R, Huang Christopher, Dorsch Michael P, Nallamothu Brahmajee, Skolarus Lesli E
Department of Neurology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
School of Information, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2022 Mar 28;6(3):e33087. doi: 10.2196/33087.
Black people are disproportionally impacted by hypertension. New approaches for encouraging healthy lifestyles are needed to reduce hypertension and promote health equity in Black communities.
In this report, we describe the early-stage, virtual design of a just-in-time adaptive intervention (JITAI) to increase physical activity in partnership with members of a low-income, predominantly Black community.
The hallmark of JITAIs is highly contextualized mobile app push notifications. Thus, understanding participants' context and determinants of physical activity are critical. During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, we conducted virtual discovery interviews and analysis guided by the Behavior Change Wheel (which focuses on participants' capacity, opportunity, and motivation to engage in physical activity), as well as empathy mapping. We then formed a community-academic participatory design team that partnered in the design sprint, storyboarding, and paper prototyping.
For this study, 5 community members participated in the discovery interviews, 12 stakeholders participated in the empathy mapping, 3 community members represented the community on the design team, and 10 community members provided storyboard or paper prototyping feedback. Only one community member had used videoconferencing prior to partnering with the academic team, and none had design experience. A set of 5 community-academic partner design principles were created: (1) keep users front and center, (2) tailor to the individual, (3) draw on existing motivation, (4) make physical activity feel approachable, and (5) make data collection transparent yet unobtrusive. To address community-specific barriers, the community-academic design team decided that mobile app push notifications will be tailored to participants' baseline mobility level and community resources (eg, local parks and events). Push notifications will also be tailored based on the day (weekday versus weekend), time of day, and weather. Motivation will be enhanced via adaptive goal setting with supportive feedback and social support via community-generated notifications.
We completed early-stage virtual design of a JITAI in partnership with community participants and a community design team with limited design and videoconferencing experience. We found that designing JITAIs with the community enables these interventions to address community-specific needs, which may lead to a more meaningful impact on users' health.
黑人受高血压影响的比例过高。需要新的方法来鼓励健康的生活方式,以降低高血压并促进黑人社区的健康公平。
在本报告中,我们描述了一种即时自适应干预(JITAI)的早期虚拟设计,该设计与一个低收入、以黑人为主的社区的成员合作,以增加身体活动。
JITAI的标志是高度情境化的移动应用推送通知。因此,了解参与者的情境和身体活动的决定因素至关重要。在COVID-19大流行最严重的时候,我们进行了虚拟发现访谈,并在行为改变轮(关注参与者参与身体活动的能力、机会和动机)以及共情映射的指导下进行了分析。然后,我们组建了一个社区-学术参与式设计团队,该团队参与了设计冲刺、故事板制作和纸质原型制作。
在本研究中,5名社区成员参与了发现访谈,12名利益相关者参与了共情映射,3名社区成员在设计团队中代表社区,10名社区成员提供了故事板或纸质原型反馈。在与学术团队合作之前,只有一名社区成员使用过视频会议,且没有人有设计经验。创建了一套5条社区-学术伙伴设计原则:(1)将用户置于首位和中心;(2)因人而异;(3)利用现有的动机;(4)使身体活动变得易于接受;(5)使数据收集透明但不引人注意。为了解决社区特定的障碍,社区-学术设计团队决定,移动应用推送通知将根据参与者的基线活动能力水平和社区资源(如当地公园和活动)进行定制。推送通知还将根据日期(工作日与周末)、一天中的时间和天气进行定制。通过适应性目标设定以及社区生成的通知提供的支持性反馈和社会支持来增强动机。
我们与社区参与者和一个设计及视频会议经验有限的社区设计团队合作,完成了JITAI的早期虚拟设计。我们发现,与社区一起设计JITAI能够使这些干预措施满足社区特定需求,这可能会对用户的健康产生更有意义的影响。