Nuseibeh Betsey Zenk, Johns Shelley A, Shih Patrick C, Lewis Gregory F, Gowan Tayler M, Jordan Evan J
School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, United States.
School of Medicine, Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2024 Dec 9;8:e59426. doi: 10.2196/59426.
Breast cancer is the world's most prevalent cancer. Although the 5-year survival rate for breast cancer in the United States is 91%, the stress and uncertainty of survivorship can often lead to symptoms of depression and anxiety. With nearly half of breast cancer survivors living with stress and symptoms of depression and anxiety, there are a significant number of unmet supportive care needs. New and potentially scalable approaches to meeting these supportive care needs are warranted.
This study aimed to engage breast cancer survivors and acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) content experts in user-centered design (UCD) to develop a mobile health app (MOSAIC [Mobile Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Stress Intervention]) using stress intervention strategies.
We held 5 UCD sessions with 5 breast cancer survivors, 3 ACT content experts, 2 user experience design experts, and 1 stress expert facilitator over the course of 10 weeks. The sessions were developed to lead the 10 co-designers through the 5-step UCD process (eg, problem identification, solution generation, convergence, prototyping, and debriefing and evaluation). Following the fifth session, a prototype was generated and evaluated by the 5 breast cancer survivors and 3 ACT experts using the System Usability Scale, Acceptability E-scale, and a brief set of semistructured interview questions.
The 10 co-designers were present for each of the 5 co-design sessions. Co-designers identified 5 design characteristics: simple entry with use reminders (behavioral nudges), a manageable number of intervention choices, highly visual content, skill-building exercises, and social support. A total of 4 features were also identified as critical to the use of the tool: an ACT and breast cancer-specific onboarding process, clean navigation tools, clear organization of the interventions, and once-per-week behavioral nudges. These requirements created the foundation for the app prototype. The 5 breast cancer survivors and 3 ACT co-designers evaluated the app prototype for 1 week, using an Android smartphone. They rated the app as usable (mean 79.29, SD 19.83) on the System Usability Scale (a priori mean cutoff score=68) and acceptable (mean 24.28, SD 2.77) on the Acceptability E-scale (a priori mean cutoff score=24).
Through the UCD process, we created an ACT app prototype with 5 breast cancer survivors, 3 ACT experts, and 2 UCD designers. The next step in our research is to continue the assessment and refining of the prototype with additional breast cancer survivors. Future work will pilot-test the app to examine the feasibility of a large-scale, randomized control trial. Studies will enroll increasingly diverse breast cancer survivors to broaden the generalizability of findings.
乳腺癌是全球最常见的癌症。尽管美国乳腺癌的5年生存率为91%,但生存带来的压力和不确定性常常会导致抑郁和焦虑症状。近一半的乳腺癌幸存者承受着压力以及抑郁和焦虑症状,存在大量未得到满足的支持性护理需求。因此,需要新的、具有潜在可扩展性的方法来满足这些支持性护理需求。
本研究旨在让乳腺癌幸存者和接受与承诺疗法(ACT)内容专家参与以用户为中心的设计(UCD),利用压力干预策略开发一款移动健康应用程序(MOSAIC [移动接受与承诺疗法压力干预])。
在10周的时间里,我们与5名乳腺癌幸存者、3名ACT内容专家、2名用户体验设计专家以及1名压力专家主持人进行了5次UCD会议。这些会议旨在引导10名共同设计者完成5个步骤的UCD流程(例如,问题识别、解决方案生成、整合、原型制作以及汇报和评估)。在第五次会议之后,生成了一个原型,并由5名乳腺癌幸存者和3名ACT专家使用系统可用性量表、可接受性E量表以及一组简短的半结构化访谈问题进行评估。
10名共同设计者参加了所有5次协同设计会议。共同设计者确定了5个设计特点:带有使用提醒的简单输入(行为助推)、数量可控的干预选择、高度可视化的内容、技能培养练习以及社会支持。还确定了4个对该工具的使用至关重要的功能:特定于ACT和乳腺癌的入门流程、简洁的导航工具、干预措施的清晰组织以及每周一次的行为助推。这些要求为应用程序原型奠定了基础。5名乳腺癌幸存者和3名ACT共同设计者使用安卓智能手机对应用程序原型进行了为期1周的评估。他们在系统可用性量表上对该应用程序的评价为可用(平均分为79.29,标准差为19.83)(先验平均临界分数 = 68),在可接受性E量表上的评价为可接受(平均分为24.28,标准差为2.77)(先验平均临界分数 = 24)。
通过UCD流程,我们与5名乳腺癌幸存者、3名ACT专家和2名UCD设计师共同创建了一个ACT应用程序原型。我们研究的下一步是继续对该原型进行评估和完善,并纳入更多乳腺癌幸存者。未来的工作将对该应用程序进行试点测试,以检验大规模随机对照试验的可行性。研究将纳入越来越多样化的乳腺癌幸存者,以扩大研究结果的普遍性。