Mateo Katrina F, Vilme Helene, Verdaguer Sandra, Fuqua Abigail, Hoyt Kris, Davis Jacquelyn, Leung May May
Hunter College, School of Urban Public Health, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Community Health and Social Sciences, CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, New York, NY, USA.
Digit Health. 2024 Dec 5;10:20552076241298433. doi: 10.1177/20552076241298433. eCollection 2024 Jan-Dec.
Technology, mobile health (mHealth), and "eHealth" are broadly used in childhood overweight and obesity interventions. However, the impact of technology-based interventions where parents or caregivers are involved is unclear. Thus, the objective of this manuscript is to provide valuable insights about the development of a parent-child web-based tool to promote healthy eating among preadolescents.
The tool development was an iterative process and comprised of two phases. In Phase 1, formative research (focus groups and interviews) were conducted with parents of children around the topics of dietary behaviors, technology use, and proposed intervention components. In Phase 2, a brief survey, focus groups, interviews, and user-centered approaches were used to confirm/finalize content, assess the website wireframe, and conduct usability testing.
From the Phase 1 formative research, parents preferred reading/looking up health-related information on larger laptop/tablet screens, but preferred smartphones when reading "on-the-go." Suggestions for an online health tool included quick/easy/low-cost recipes, tips for healthy feeding and involving their children around healthy dietary-related behaviors, clear tool navigation, and using pictures/visuals. In Phase 2, when finalizing the tool wireframe and content, parents preferred a variety of motivational healthy feeding tips, local family-oriented community events, and a simple layout with minimal clicking to access links. During usability testing, parents responded positively to the content (healthy feeding tips, recipes, coupons, and free community events) and the clean layout.
Formative research and user-centered approaches with parents of preadolescents resulted in a web-based, mobile-friendly health promotion tool.
技术、移动健康(mHealth)和“电子健康”在儿童超重和肥胖干预中被广泛应用。然而,涉及父母或照顾者的基于技术的干预措施的影响尚不清楚。因此,本手稿的目的是提供有关开发一种基于网络的亲子工具以促进青春期前儿童健康饮食的宝贵见解。
工具开发是一个迭代过程,包括两个阶段。在第一阶段,围绕饮食行为、技术使用和拟议的干预组成部分等主题,与儿童家长进行了形成性研究(焦点小组和访谈)。在第二阶段,使用简短调查、焦点小组、访谈和以用户为中心的方法来确认/确定内容、评估网站框架并进行可用性测试。
从第一阶段的形成性研究中,家长们更喜欢在较大的笔记本电脑/平板电脑屏幕上阅读/查找与健康相关的信息,但在“外出”阅读时更喜欢智能手机。对在线健康工具的建议包括快速/简单/低成本的食谱、健康喂养的小贴士以及让孩子参与与健康饮食相关的行为、清晰的工具导航以及使用图片/视觉效果。在第二阶段,在确定工具框架和内容时,家长们更喜欢各种激励性的健康喂养小贴士、以当地家庭为导向的社区活动以及布局简单、点击链接最少的设计。在可用性测试期间,家长们对内容(健康喂养小贴士、食谱、优惠券和免费社区活动)和简洁的布局给予了积极回应。
对青春期前儿童家长进行的形成性研究和以用户为中心的方法产生了一种基于网络、便于移动使用的健康促进工具。