Using a Collaborative Research Approach to Develop an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for the Study of Mobile Health Interventions for Older Adults

BackgroundSeniors with chronic diseases are often called on to self-manage their conditions. Mobile health (mHealth) tools may be a useful strategy to help seniors access health information at the point of decision-making, receive real-time feedback and coaching, and monitor...

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Main Authors: Mercer, Kathryn, Baskerville, Neill, Burns, Catherine M, Chang, Feng, Giangregorio, Lora, Tomasson Goodwin, Jill, Sadat Rezai, Leila, Grindrod, Kelly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2015-02-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2015/1/e11/
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spelling doaj-76209902753140e98f5a989a0edd63b12021-05-02T19:27:47ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222015-02-0131e1110.2196/mhealth.3509Using a Collaborative Research Approach to Develop an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for the Study of Mobile Health Interventions for Older AdultsMercer, KathrynBaskerville, NeillBurns, Catherine MChang, FengGiangregorio, LoraTomasson Goodwin, JillSadat Rezai, LeilaGrindrod, Kelly BackgroundSeniors with chronic diseases are often called on to self-manage their conditions. Mobile health (mHealth) tools may be a useful strategy to help seniors access health information at the point of decision-making, receive real-time feedback and coaching, and monitor health conditions. However, developing successful mHealth interventions for seniors presents many challenges. One of the key challenges is to ensure the scope of possible research questions includes the diverse views of seniors, experts and the stakeholder groups who support seniors as they manage chronic disease. ObjectiveOur primary objective was to present a case-study of a collaborative research approach to the development of an interdisciplinary research agenda. Our secondary objectives were to report on the results of a nominal group technique (NGT) approach used generate research questions and to assess the success of including non-academic researchers to enrich the scope, priority, and total number of possible research questions. MethodsWe invited researchers and stakeholders to participate in a full day meeting that included rapid-style presentations by researchers, health care professionals, technology experts, patients and community groups followed by group discussions. An NGT was used to establish group consensus on the following question: In your opinion, what research needs to be done to better understand the effectiveness, usability and design of mobile health apps and devices for older adults? ResultsOverall, the collaborative approach was a very successful strategy to bring together a diverse group of participants with the same end goal. The 32 participants generated 119 items in total. The top three research questions that emerged from the NGT were related to adoption, the need for high quality tools and the digital divide. Strong sub-themes included privacy and security, engagement and design. The NGT also helped us include the perspectives information from non-academic researchers that would not have been captured if the process had been limited to the research team. ConclusionsDeveloping ways for patients and other stakeholders to have a voice when it comes to developing patient awareness as related to mHealth may guide future research into engagement, ownership, usability and design. It is our intention that our paper be used and adapted by other researchers to engage small or vulnerable populations often excluded from mHealth research and design.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2015/1/e11/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mercer, Kathryn
Baskerville, Neill
Burns, Catherine M
Chang, Feng
Giangregorio, Lora
Tomasson Goodwin, Jill
Sadat Rezai, Leila
Grindrod, Kelly
spellingShingle Mercer, Kathryn
Baskerville, Neill
Burns, Catherine M
Chang, Feng
Giangregorio, Lora
Tomasson Goodwin, Jill
Sadat Rezai, Leila
Grindrod, Kelly
Using a Collaborative Research Approach to Develop an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for the Study of Mobile Health Interventions for Older Adults
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Mercer, Kathryn
Baskerville, Neill
Burns, Catherine M
Chang, Feng
Giangregorio, Lora
Tomasson Goodwin, Jill
Sadat Rezai, Leila
Grindrod, Kelly
author_sort Mercer, Kathryn
title Using a Collaborative Research Approach to Develop an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for the Study of Mobile Health Interventions for Older Adults
title_short Using a Collaborative Research Approach to Develop an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for the Study of Mobile Health Interventions for Older Adults
title_full Using a Collaborative Research Approach to Develop an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for the Study of Mobile Health Interventions for Older Adults
title_fullStr Using a Collaborative Research Approach to Develop an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for the Study of Mobile Health Interventions for Older Adults
title_full_unstemmed Using a Collaborative Research Approach to Develop an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for the Study of Mobile Health Interventions for Older Adults
title_sort using a collaborative research approach to develop an interdisciplinary research agenda for the study of mobile health interventions for older adults
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2015-02-01
description BackgroundSeniors with chronic diseases are often called on to self-manage their conditions. Mobile health (mHealth) tools may be a useful strategy to help seniors access health information at the point of decision-making, receive real-time feedback and coaching, and monitor health conditions. However, developing successful mHealth interventions for seniors presents many challenges. One of the key challenges is to ensure the scope of possible research questions includes the diverse views of seniors, experts and the stakeholder groups who support seniors as they manage chronic disease. ObjectiveOur primary objective was to present a case-study of a collaborative research approach to the development of an interdisciplinary research agenda. Our secondary objectives were to report on the results of a nominal group technique (NGT) approach used generate research questions and to assess the success of including non-academic researchers to enrich the scope, priority, and total number of possible research questions. MethodsWe invited researchers and stakeholders to participate in a full day meeting that included rapid-style presentations by researchers, health care professionals, technology experts, patients and community groups followed by group discussions. An NGT was used to establish group consensus on the following question: In your opinion, what research needs to be done to better understand the effectiveness, usability and design of mobile health apps and devices for older adults? ResultsOverall, the collaborative approach was a very successful strategy to bring together a diverse group of participants with the same end goal. The 32 participants generated 119 items in total. The top three research questions that emerged from the NGT were related to adoption, the need for high quality tools and the digital divide. Strong sub-themes included privacy and security, engagement and design. The NGT also helped us include the perspectives information from non-academic researchers that would not have been captured if the process had been limited to the research team. ConclusionsDeveloping ways for patients and other stakeholders to have a voice when it comes to developing patient awareness as related to mHealth may guide future research into engagement, ownership, usability and design. It is our intention that our paper be used and adapted by other researchers to engage small or vulnerable populations often excluded from mHealth research and design.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2015/1/e11/
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