Acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a Proof of Principle (POP) study

April BCG Boessen,1 Joan Vermeulen,2 Luc P de Witte3 1Research Centre for Technology in Care, Faculty of Health, Zuyd University of Applied Sciences, Heerlen, the Netherlands; 2Lunet zorg, Eindhoven, the Netherlands; 3The Innovation Centre, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK Background: La...

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Main Authors: Boessen AB, Vermeulen J, de Witte LP
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2017-08-01
Series:Patient Preference and Adherence
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/acceptance-and-usability-of-a-home-based-monitoring-tool-of-health-ind-peer-reviewed-article-PPA
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spelling doaj-2b7df1a81ef24eaf962d80c43e59bbe62020-11-24T21:32:01ZengDove Medical PressPatient Preference and Adherence1177-889X2017-08-01Volume 111317132434062Acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a Proof of Principle (POP) studyBoessen ABVermeulen Jde Witte LPApril BCG Boessen,1 Joan Vermeulen,2 Luc P de Witte3 1Research Centre for Technology in Care, Faculty of Health, Zuyd University of Applied Sciences, Heerlen, the Netherlands; 2Lunet zorg, Eindhoven, the Netherlands; 3The Innovation Centre, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK Background: Large-scale cohort studies are needed to confirm the relation between dementia and its possible risk factors. The inclusion of people with dementia in research is a challenge, however, children of people with dementia are at risk and are highly motivated to participate in dementia research. For technologies to support home-based data collection during large-scale studies, participants should be able and willing to use technology for a longer period of time. Objective: This study investigated acceptance and usability of iVitality, a research platform for home-based monitoring of dementia health indicators, in 151 children of people with dementia and investigated which frequency of measurements is acceptable for them. Methods: Participants were randomized to fortnightly or monthly measurements. At baseline and after 3 months, participants completed an online questionnaire regarding the acceptance (Technology Acceptance Model; 38 items) and usability (Post-Study System Usability Questionnaire; 24 items) of iVitality. Items were rated from 1 (I totally disagree) to 7 (I totally agree). Participants were also invited to take part in an online focus group (OFG) after 3 months of follow-up. Descriptive statistics and both two-sample/independent and paired t-tests were used to analyze the online questionnaires and a directed content analysis was used to analyze the OFGs. Results: Children of people with dementia accept iVitality after long-term use and evaluate iVitality as a user-friendly, useful, and trusted technology, despite some suggestions for improvement. Overall, mean scores on acceptance and usability were higher than 5 (I somewhat agree), although the acceptance subscales “social influence” and “time” were rated somewhat lower. No significant differences in acceptance and usability were found between both protocol groups. Over time, “affect” significantly increased among participants measuring blood pressure fortnightly. Conclusion: iVitality has the potential to be used in large-scale studies for home-based monitoring of health indicators related to the development of dementia. Keywords: dementia, risk factors, e-health, telemonitoring, acceptance, usabilityhttps://www.dovepress.com/acceptance-and-usability-of-a-home-based-monitoring-tool-of-health-ind-peer-reviewed-article-PPAdementiarisk factorse-healthtelemonitoringacceptanceusability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Boessen AB
Vermeulen J
de Witte LP
spellingShingle Boessen AB
Vermeulen J
de Witte LP
Acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a Proof of Principle (POP) study
Patient Preference and Adherence
dementia
risk factors
e-health
telemonitoring
acceptance
usability
author_facet Boessen AB
Vermeulen J
de Witte LP
author_sort Boessen AB
title Acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a Proof of Principle (POP) study
title_short Acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a Proof of Principle (POP) study
title_full Acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a Proof of Principle (POP) study
title_fullStr Acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a Proof of Principle (POP) study
title_full_unstemmed Acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a Proof of Principle (POP) study
title_sort acceptance and usability of a home-based monitoring tool of health indicators in children of people with dementia: a proof of principle (pop) study
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Patient Preference and Adherence
issn 1177-889X
publishDate 2017-08-01
description April BCG Boessen,1 Joan Vermeulen,2 Luc P de Witte3 1Research Centre for Technology in Care, Faculty of Health, Zuyd University of Applied Sciences, Heerlen, the Netherlands; 2Lunet zorg, Eindhoven, the Netherlands; 3The Innovation Centre, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK Background: Large-scale cohort studies are needed to confirm the relation between dementia and its possible risk factors. The inclusion of people with dementia in research is a challenge, however, children of people with dementia are at risk and are highly motivated to participate in dementia research. For technologies to support home-based data collection during large-scale studies, participants should be able and willing to use technology for a longer period of time. Objective: This study investigated acceptance and usability of iVitality, a research platform for home-based monitoring of dementia health indicators, in 151 children of people with dementia and investigated which frequency of measurements is acceptable for them. Methods: Participants were randomized to fortnightly or monthly measurements. At baseline and after 3 months, participants completed an online questionnaire regarding the acceptance (Technology Acceptance Model; 38 items) and usability (Post-Study System Usability Questionnaire; 24 items) of iVitality. Items were rated from 1 (I totally disagree) to 7 (I totally agree). Participants were also invited to take part in an online focus group (OFG) after 3 months of follow-up. Descriptive statistics and both two-sample/independent and paired t-tests were used to analyze the online questionnaires and a directed content analysis was used to analyze the OFGs. Results: Children of people with dementia accept iVitality after long-term use and evaluate iVitality as a user-friendly, useful, and trusted technology, despite some suggestions for improvement. Overall, mean scores on acceptance and usability were higher than 5 (I somewhat agree), although the acceptance subscales “social influence” and “time” were rated somewhat lower. No significant differences in acceptance and usability were found between both protocol groups. Over time, “affect” significantly increased among participants measuring blood pressure fortnightly. Conclusion: iVitality has the potential to be used in large-scale studies for home-based monitoring of health indicators related to the development of dementia. Keywords: dementia, risk factors, e-health, telemonitoring, acceptance, usability
topic dementia
risk factors
e-health
telemonitoring
acceptance
usability
url https://www.dovepress.com/acceptance-and-usability-of-a-home-based-monitoring-tool-of-health-ind-peer-reviewed-article-PPA
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