Department of Women, Children and Family Nursing, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United States.
Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City, MO, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2024 Nov 26;8:e60918. doi: 10.2196/60918.
Young Black male individuals are 24 times more likely to be impacted by firearm injuries and homicides but encounter significant barriers to care and service disengagement, even in program-rich cities across the United States, leaving them worryingly underserved. Existing community-based interventions focus on secondary and tertiary prevention after firearm violence has occurred and are typically deployed in emergency settings. To address these service and uptake issues, we developed BrotherlyACT-a nurse-led, culturally tailored, multicomponent app-to reduce the risk and effects of firearm injuries and homicides and to improve access to precrisis and mental health resources for young Black male individuals (aged 15-24 years) in low-resource and high-violence settings. Grounded in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, the app provides life skills coaching, safety planning, artificial intelligence-powered talk therapy, and zip code-based service connections directly to young Black male individuals at risk for violence and substance use.
The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the usability, engagement, and satisfaction of BrotherlyACT among target young Black male users and mobile health (mHealth) experts, using a combination of formative usability testing (UT) and heuristic evaluation (HE).
Using a convergent mixed methods approach, we evaluated the BrotherlyACT app using HE by 8 mHealth specialists and conducted UT with 23 participants, comprising 15 young Black male users (aged 15-24 years), alongside 4 adult internal team testers and 4 high school students who were part of our youth advisory board. UT included the System Usability Scale and thematic analysis of think-aloud interviews and cognitive walkthroughs. HE involved mHealth experts applying the Nielsen severity rating scale (score 0-3, with 3 indicating a major issue). All testing was conducted via REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) and Zoom or in person.
Qualitative usability issues were categorized into 8 thematic groups, revealing only minor usability concerns. The app achieved an average System Usability Scale score of 79, equivalent to an A-minus grade and placing it in the 85th percentile, indicating near-excellent usability. Similarly, the HE by testers identified minor and cosmetic usability issues, with a median severity score of 1 across various heuristics (on a scale of 0-3), indicating minimal impact on user experience. Overall, minor adjustments were recommended to enhance navigation, customization, and guidance for app users, while the app's visual and functional design was generally well received.
BrotherlyACT was considered highly usable and acceptable. Testers in the UT stage gave the app a positive overall rating and emphasized that several key improvements were made. Findings from our UT prompted revisions to the app prototype. Moving forward, a pilot study with a pretest-posttest design will evaluate the app's efficacy in community health and emergency care settings.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR2-10.2196/43842.
年轻的黑人男性患枪支伤害和凶杀的可能性是其他人群的 24 倍,但他们在获得医疗服务和脱离治疗方面面临着巨大的障碍,即使在美国那些拥有丰富项目的城市也是如此,这使得他们的服务需求得不到满足。现有的基于社区的干预措施主要集中在枪支暴力发生后的二级和三级预防,通常在紧急情况下部署。为了解决这些服务和参与问题,我们开发了 BrotherlyACT-一种由护士主导、文化适应、多组件的应用程序-旨在降低年轻黑人男性(15-24 岁)患枪支伤害和凶杀的风险和影响,并改善他们在资源匮乏和暴力程度高的环境中获得危机前和心理健康资源的机会。BrotherlyACT 基于接受和承诺疗法,为有暴力和药物使用风险的年轻黑人男性提供生活技能指导、安全规划、人工智能驱动的谈话疗法和基于邮政编码的服务连接。
本研究的主要目的是使用形成性可用性测试(UT)和启发式评估(HE)相结合的方法,评估 BrotherlyACT 在目标年轻黑人男性用户和移动健康(mHealth)专家中的可用性、参与度和满意度。
我们采用了一种收敛混合方法,使用 8 名 mHealth 专家进行 HE,并对 23 名参与者进行了 UT,其中包括 15 名年轻的黑人男性用户(15-24 岁),以及 4 名内部团队测试员和 4 名高中生,他们是我们青年咨询委员会的成员。UT 包括系统可用性量表和出声思维访谈和认知走查的主题分析。HE 涉及 mHealth 专家应用尼尔森严重程度评分(得分 0-3,3 表示主要问题)。所有测试均通过 REDCap(Research Electronic Data Capture)和 Zoom 或面对面进行。
定性可用性问题分为 8 个主题组,仅发现了一些轻微的可用性问题。该应用程序的系统可用性量表平均得分为 79,相当于 A-级,排名第 85 位,表明可用性非常好。同样,测试人员的 HE 也发现了一些轻微的和表面的可用性问题,各种启发式评估的严重程度中位数为 1(范围为 0-3),这表明对用户体验的影响很小。总体而言,建议对导航、自定义和应用程序用户的指导进行一些小的调整,同时应用程序的视觉和功能设计也得到了普遍好评。
BrotherlyACT 被认为具有高度的可用性和可接受性。UT 阶段的测试人员对该应用程序给予了积极的总体评价,并强调了进行了几项关键改进。我们的 UT 结果促使对应用程序原型进行了修订。未来,一项具有预测试-后测试设计的试点研究将评估该应用程序在社区卫生和紧急护理环境中的效果。