TY - JOUR
T1 - Development of an mHealth platform for HIV care
T2 - Gathering user perspectives through co-design workshops and interviews
AU - EmERGE Consortium
AU - Marent, Benjamin
AU - Henwood, Flis
AU - Darking, Mary
AU - Leon, Agathe
AU - West, Brian
AU - Lockhart, Daniel
AU - Garcia, David
AU - Fatz, Duncan
AU - Wallitt, Ed
AU - Beck, Eduard
AU - Gomez, Enrique
AU - Teofilo, Eugenio
AU - Gonzalez, Eva
AU - Garcia, Felipe
AU - Rodrigues, Goncalo
AU - Whetham, Jennifer
AU - Begovac, Josip
AU - Block, Koen
AU - Pereira, Letitia
AU - Apers, Ludwig
AU - Borges, Margarida
AU - Chausa, Paloma
AU - Zekan, Sime
AU - Bremner, Steven
AU - Hoornaert, Steven
AU - Mandalia, Sundhiya
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Benjamin Marent, Flis Henwood, Mary Darking, EmERGE Consortium.
PY - 2018/10
Y1 - 2018/10
N2 - Background: Despite advances in testing and treatment, HIV incidence rates within European countries are at best stable or else increasing. mHealth technology has been advocated to increase quality and cost-effectiveness of health services while dealing with growing patient numbers. However, studies suggested that mHealth apps are rarely adopted and often considered to be of low quality by users. Only a few studies (conducted in the United States) have involved people living with HIV (PLWH) in the design of mHealth.Objective: The goal of this study was to facilitate a co-design process among PLWH and clinicians across 5 clinical sites in the European Union to inform the development of an mHealth platform to be integrated into clinical care pathways. We aimed to (1) elicit experiences of living with HIV and of working in HIV care, (2) identify mHealth functionalities that are considered useful for HIV care, and (3) identify potential benefits as well as concerns about mHealth.Methods: Between January and June 2016, 14 co-design workshops and 22 semistructured interviews were conducted, involving 97 PLWH and 63 clinicians. Data were analyzed thematically and iteratively, drawing on grounded theory techniques.Results: Findings were established into 3 thematic clusters: (1) approaching the mHealth platform, (2) imagining the mHealth platform, and (3) anticipating the mHealth platform’s implications. Co-design participants approached the mHealth platform with pre-existing concerns arising from their experiences of receiving or providing care. PLWH particularly addressed issues of stigma and questioned how mHealth could enable them to manage their HIV. Clinicians problematized the compatibility of mHealth with existing information technology systems and questioned which patients should be targeted by mHealth. Imagining the potential of mHealth for HIV care, co-design participants suggested medical functionalities (accessing test results, managing medicines and appointments, and digital communication channels), social functionalities (peer support network, international travel, etc), and general features (security and privacy, credibility, language, etc). Co-design participants also anticipated potential implications of mHealth for self-management and the provision of care.Conclusions: Our approach to co-design enabled us to facilitate early engagement in the mHealth platform, enabling patient and clinician feedback to become embedded in the development process at a preprototype phase. Although the technologies in question were not yet present, understanding how users approach, imagine, and anticipate technology formed an important source of knowledge and proved highly significant within the technology design and development process.
AB - Background: Despite advances in testing and treatment, HIV incidence rates within European countries are at best stable or else increasing. mHealth technology has been advocated to increase quality and cost-effectiveness of health services while dealing with growing patient numbers. However, studies suggested that mHealth apps are rarely adopted and often considered to be of low quality by users. Only a few studies (conducted in the United States) have involved people living with HIV (PLWH) in the design of mHealth.Objective: The goal of this study was to facilitate a co-design process among PLWH and clinicians across 5 clinical sites in the European Union to inform the development of an mHealth platform to be integrated into clinical care pathways. We aimed to (1) elicit experiences of living with HIV and of working in HIV care, (2) identify mHealth functionalities that are considered useful for HIV care, and (3) identify potential benefits as well as concerns about mHealth.Methods: Between January and June 2016, 14 co-design workshops and 22 semistructured interviews were conducted, involving 97 PLWH and 63 clinicians. Data were analyzed thematically and iteratively, drawing on grounded theory techniques.Results: Findings were established into 3 thematic clusters: (1) approaching the mHealth platform, (2) imagining the mHealth platform, and (3) anticipating the mHealth platform’s implications. Co-design participants approached the mHealth platform with pre-existing concerns arising from their experiences of receiving or providing care. PLWH particularly addressed issues of stigma and questioned how mHealth could enable them to manage their HIV. Clinicians problematized the compatibility of mHealth with existing information technology systems and questioned which patients should be targeted by mHealth. Imagining the potential of mHealth for HIV care, co-design participants suggested medical functionalities (accessing test results, managing medicines and appointments, and digital communication channels), social functionalities (peer support network, international travel, etc), and general features (security and privacy, credibility, language, etc). Co-design participants also anticipated potential implications of mHealth for self-management and the provision of care.Conclusions: Our approach to co-design enabled us to facilitate early engagement in the mHealth platform, enabling patient and clinician feedback to become embedded in the development process at a preprototype phase. Although the technologies in question were not yet present, understanding how users approach, imagine, and anticipate technology formed an important source of knowledge and proved highly significant within the technology design and development process.
KW - Community-based participatory research
KW - HIV
KW - Health services
KW - Information technology
KW - Medical
KW - Mobile applications
KW - Patient participation
KW - Self-management
KW - Sexual health
KW - Sociology
KW - Telemedicine
KW - mHealth
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85053306697&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85053306697&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2196/mhealth.9856
DO - 10.2196/mhealth.9856
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85053306697
SN - 2291-5222
VL - 6
JO - JMIR mHealth and uHealth
JF - JMIR mHealth and uHealth
IS - 10
M1 - e184
ER -