Exploring Attitudes and Experiences of People With Knee Osteoarthritis Toward a Self-Directed eHealth Intervention to Support Exercise: Qualitative Study

BackgroundKnee osteoarthritis (OA) is a highly prevalent and debilitating condition. Exercise is a recommended treatment because of its effectiveness at improving pain and function. However, exercise is underutilized in OA management. Difficulty accessing health care has been...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nelligan, Rachel K, Hinman, Rana S, Teo, Pek Ling, Bennell, Kim L
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-11-01
Series:JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
Online Access:http://rehab.jmir.org/2020/2/e18860/
id doaj-0b19ebf606cd480a8d93a3520c20b220
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0b19ebf606cd480a8d93a3520c20b2202021-05-03T01:43:03ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies2369-25292020-11-0172e1886010.2196/18860Exploring Attitudes and Experiences of People With Knee Osteoarthritis Toward a Self-Directed eHealth Intervention to Support Exercise: Qualitative StudyNelligan, Rachel KHinman, Rana STeo, Pek LingBennell, Kim L BackgroundKnee osteoarthritis (OA) is a highly prevalent and debilitating condition. Exercise is a recommended treatment because of its effectiveness at improving pain and function. However, exercise is underutilized in OA management. Difficulty accessing health care has been identified as a key barrier to exercise uptake. Innovative and scalable methods of delivering exercise treatments to people with knee OA are needed. We developed a self-directed eHealth intervention to enable and encourage exercise participation. The effectiveness of this intervention on pain and function in people with knee OA is being evaluated in a randomized clinical trial. ObjectiveThis study aimed to explore the attitudes and experiences of people with knee OA who accessed the self-directed eHealth intervention and the features perceived as useful to facilitate self-directed exercise. MethodsThis was a qualitative study embedded within a randomized controlled trial. Individual, semistructured phone interviews were conducted with 16 people with knee OA who had accessed a 24-week eHealth intervention (website and behavior change SMS program) designed to support exercise participation. Interviews were audiorecorded, transcribed verbatim, and thematically analyzed using an inductive approach. ResultsFive themes arose: (1) technology easy to use and follow (website ease of use, SMS ease of use), (2) facilitators to exercise participation (credible OA and exercise information, website features, prescribed exercises simple to do unsupervised, freedom to adapt the exercise to suit needs, influence of other health care experiences), (3) sense of support and accountability (SMS good reminder and prompt, accountable, SMS tone and automation could trigger negative emotions [eg, guilt or shame], inability to contact someone when needed), (4) positive outcomes (knee symptom improvements, confidence to self-manage, encouraged active living), (5) suggestions for real-world application (provided by a health professional preferred, should be provided at subsidized or low out-of-pocket cost). ConclusionsPeople with knee OA had mostly positive experiences with and attitudes towards the use of an eHealth intervention that supported exercise participation independent of a health professional. A human connection associated with the eHealth intervention appeared important.http://rehab.jmir.org/2020/2/e18860/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nelligan, Rachel K
Hinman, Rana S
Teo, Pek Ling
Bennell, Kim L
spellingShingle Nelligan, Rachel K
Hinman, Rana S
Teo, Pek Ling
Bennell, Kim L
Exploring Attitudes and Experiences of People With Knee Osteoarthritis Toward a Self-Directed eHealth Intervention to Support Exercise: Qualitative Study
JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
author_facet Nelligan, Rachel K
Hinman, Rana S
Teo, Pek Ling
Bennell, Kim L
author_sort Nelligan, Rachel K
title Exploring Attitudes and Experiences of People With Knee Osteoarthritis Toward a Self-Directed eHealth Intervention to Support Exercise: Qualitative Study
title_short Exploring Attitudes and Experiences of People With Knee Osteoarthritis Toward a Self-Directed eHealth Intervention to Support Exercise: Qualitative Study
title_full Exploring Attitudes and Experiences of People With Knee Osteoarthritis Toward a Self-Directed eHealth Intervention to Support Exercise: Qualitative Study
title_fullStr Exploring Attitudes and Experiences of People With Knee Osteoarthritis Toward a Self-Directed eHealth Intervention to Support Exercise: Qualitative Study
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Attitudes and Experiences of People With Knee Osteoarthritis Toward a Self-Directed eHealth Intervention to Support Exercise: Qualitative Study
title_sort exploring attitudes and experiences of people with knee osteoarthritis toward a self-directed ehealth intervention to support exercise: qualitative study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies
issn 2369-2529
publishDate 2020-11-01
description BackgroundKnee osteoarthritis (OA) is a highly prevalent and debilitating condition. Exercise is a recommended treatment because of its effectiveness at improving pain and function. However, exercise is underutilized in OA management. Difficulty accessing health care has been identified as a key barrier to exercise uptake. Innovative and scalable methods of delivering exercise treatments to people with knee OA are needed. We developed a self-directed eHealth intervention to enable and encourage exercise participation. The effectiveness of this intervention on pain and function in people with knee OA is being evaluated in a randomized clinical trial. ObjectiveThis study aimed to explore the attitudes and experiences of people with knee OA who accessed the self-directed eHealth intervention and the features perceived as useful to facilitate self-directed exercise. MethodsThis was a qualitative study embedded within a randomized controlled trial. Individual, semistructured phone interviews were conducted with 16 people with knee OA who had accessed a 24-week eHealth intervention (website and behavior change SMS program) designed to support exercise participation. Interviews were audiorecorded, transcribed verbatim, and thematically analyzed using an inductive approach. ResultsFive themes arose: (1) technology easy to use and follow (website ease of use, SMS ease of use), (2) facilitators to exercise participation (credible OA and exercise information, website features, prescribed exercises simple to do unsupervised, freedom to adapt the exercise to suit needs, influence of other health care experiences), (3) sense of support and accountability (SMS good reminder and prompt, accountable, SMS tone and automation could trigger negative emotions [eg, guilt or shame], inability to contact someone when needed), (4) positive outcomes (knee symptom improvements, confidence to self-manage, encouraged active living), (5) suggestions for real-world application (provided by a health professional preferred, should be provided at subsidized or low out-of-pocket cost). ConclusionsPeople with knee OA had mostly positive experiences with and attitudes towards the use of an eHealth intervention that supported exercise participation independent of a health professional. A human connection associated with the eHealth intervention appeared important.
url http://rehab.jmir.org/2020/2/e18860/
work_keys_str_mv AT nelliganrachelk exploringattitudesandexperiencesofpeoplewithkneeosteoarthritistowardaselfdirectedehealthinterventiontosupportexercisequalitativestudy
AT hinmanranas exploringattitudesandexperiencesofpeoplewithkneeosteoarthritistowardaselfdirectedehealthinterventiontosupportexercisequalitativestudy
AT teopekling exploringattitudesandexperiencesofpeoplewithkneeosteoarthritistowardaselfdirectedehealthinterventiontosupportexercisequalitativestudy
AT bennellkiml exploringattitudesandexperiencesofpeoplewithkneeosteoarthritistowardaselfdirectedehealthinterventiontosupportexercisequalitativestudy
_version_ 1721485538544844800