Future Health Technologies, Singapore-ETH Centre, Campus for Research Excellence And Technological Enterprise (CREATE), Singapore, Singapore.
Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Apr 24;23(1):753. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15598-8.
Changing lifestyle patterns over the last decades have seen growing numbers of people in Asia affected by non-communicable diseases and common mental health disorders, including diabetes, cancer, and/or depression. Interventions targeting healthy lifestyle behaviours through mobile technologies, including new approaches such as chatbots, may be an effective, low-cost approach to prevent these conditions. To ensure uptake and engagement with mobile health interventions, however, it is essential to understand the end-users' perspectives on using such interventions. The aim of this study was to explore perceptions, barriers, and facilitators to the use of mobile health interventions for lifestyle behaviour change in Singapore.
Six virtual focus group discussions were conducted with a total of 34 participants (mean ± SD; aged 45 ± 3.6 years; 64.7% females). Focus group recordings were transcribed verbatim and analysed using an inductive thematic analysis approach, followed by deductive mapping according to perceptions, barriers, facilitators, mixed factors, or strategies.
Five themes were identified: (i) holistic wellbeing is central to healthy living (i.e., the importance of both physical and mental health); (ii) encouraging uptake of a mobile health intervention is influenced by factors such as incentives and government backing; (iii) trying out a mobile health intervention is one thing, sticking to it long term is another and there are key factors, such as personalisation and ease of use that influence sustained engagement with mobile health interventions; (iv) perceptions of chatbots as a tool to support healthy lifestyle behaviour are influenced by previous negative experiences with chatbots, which might hamper uptake; and (v) sharing health-related data is OK, but with conditions such as clarity on who will have access to the data, how it will be stored, and for what purpose it will be used.
Findings highlight several factors that are relevant for the development and implementation of mobile health interventions in Singapore and other Asian countries. Recommendations include: (i) targeting holistic wellbeing, (ii) tailoring content to address environment-specific barriers, (iii) partnering with government and/or local (non-profit) institutions in the development and/or promotion of mobile health interventions, (iv) managing expectations regarding the use of incentives, and (iv) identifying potential alternatives or complementary approaches to the use of chatbots, particularly for mental health.
过去几十年来,生活方式的改变导致越来越多的亚洲人受到非传染性疾病和常见心理健康障碍的影响,包括糖尿病、癌症和/或抑郁症。通过移动技术针对健康生活方式行为的干预措施,包括聊天机器人等新方法,可能是预防这些疾病的有效、低成本方法。然而,为了确保移动健康干预措施的采用和参与,了解最终用户对使用此类干预措施的看法至关重要。本研究旨在探讨新加坡人对使用移动健康干预措施改变生活方式行为的看法、障碍和促进因素。
共进行了 6 次虚拟焦点小组讨论,共有 34 名参与者(平均年龄±标准差;45±3.6 岁;64.7%为女性)。对焦点小组的录音进行了逐字转录,并采用归纳主题分析方法进行分析,然后根据看法、障碍、促进因素、混合因素或策略进行演绎映射。
确定了五个主题:(i)整体健康是健康生活的核心(即身体健康和心理健康同样重要);(ii)激励措施和政府支持等因素会影响移动健康干预措施的采用;(iii)尝试移动健康干预措施是一回事,长期坚持则是另一回事,个性化和易用性等关键因素会影响移动健康干预措施的持续参与;(iv)对聊天机器人作为支持健康生活行为工具的看法受到以前对聊天机器人的负面体验的影响,这可能会阻碍采用;(v)共享健康相关数据是可以的,但有条件,例如明确谁将有权访问数据、如何存储数据以及将数据用于什么目的。
研究结果突出了与新加坡和其他亚洲国家移动健康干预措施的开发和实施相关的几个因素。建议包括:(i)以整体健康为目标;(ii)针对特定环境的障碍调整内容;(iii)与政府和/或当地(非营利)机构合作开发和/或推广移动健康干预措施;(iv)管理对激励措施的期望;(iv)确定聊天机器人使用的潜在替代或补充方法,特别是在心理健康方面。