Development of a Positive Body Image Chatbot (KIT) With Young People and Parents/Carers: Qualitative Focus Group Study

BackgroundBody image and eating disorders represent a significant public health concern; however, many affected individuals never access appropriate treatment. Conversational agents or chatbots reflect a unique opportunity to target those affected online by providing psychoed...

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Main Authors: Francesca Beilharz, Suku Sukunesan, Susan L Rossell, Jayashri Kulkarni, Gemma Sharp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2021-06-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:https://www.jmir.org/2021/6/e27807
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spelling doaj-c386ccd8982b46449127e59f668c91272021-06-16T14:46:40ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712021-06-01236e2780710.2196/27807Development of a Positive Body Image Chatbot (KIT) With Young People and Parents/Carers: Qualitative Focus Group StudyFrancesca Beilharzhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-3241-2558Suku Sukunesanhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8563-3469Susan L Rossellhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7415-8252Jayashri Kulkarnihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-3875-5623Gemma Sharphttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9946-518X BackgroundBody image and eating disorders represent a significant public health concern; however, many affected individuals never access appropriate treatment. Conversational agents or chatbots reflect a unique opportunity to target those affected online by providing psychoeducation and coping skills, thus filling the gap in service provision. ObjectiveA world-first body image chatbot called “KIT” was designed. The aim of this study was to assess preliminary acceptability and feasibility via the collection of qualitative feedback from young people and parents/carers regarding the content, structure, and design of the chatbot, in accordance with an agile methodology strategy. The chatbot was developed in collaboration with Australia’s national eating disorder support organization, the Butterfly Foundation. MethodsA conversation decision tree was designed that offered psychoeducational information on body image and eating disorders, as well as evidence-based coping strategies. A version of KIT was built as a research prototype to deliver these conversations. Six focus groups were conducted using online semistructured interviews to seek feedback on the KIT prototype. This included four groups of people seeking help for themselves (n=17; age 13-18 years) and two groups of parents/carers (n=8; age 46-57 years). Participants provided feedback on the cartoon chatbot character design, as well as the content, structure, and design of the chatbot webchat. ResultsThematic analyses identified the following three main themes from the six focus groups: (1) chatbot character and design, (2) content presentation, and (3) flow. Overall, the participants provided positive feedback regarding KIT, with both young people and parents/carers generally providing similar reflections. The participants approved of KIT’s character and engagement. Specific suggestions were made regarding the brevity and tone to increase KIT’s interactivity. ConclusionsFocus groups provided overall positive qualitative feedback regarding the content, structure, and design of the body image chatbot. Incorporating the feedback of lived experience from both individuals and parents/carers allowed the refinement of KIT in the development phase as per an iterative agile methodology. Further research is required to evaluate KIT’s efficacy.https://www.jmir.org/2021/6/e27807
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesca Beilharz
Suku Sukunesan
Susan L Rossell
Jayashri Kulkarni
Gemma Sharp
spellingShingle Francesca Beilharz
Suku Sukunesan
Susan L Rossell
Jayashri Kulkarni
Gemma Sharp
Development of a Positive Body Image Chatbot (KIT) With Young People and Parents/Carers: Qualitative Focus Group Study
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Francesca Beilharz
Suku Sukunesan
Susan L Rossell
Jayashri Kulkarni
Gemma Sharp
author_sort Francesca Beilharz
title Development of a Positive Body Image Chatbot (KIT) With Young People and Parents/Carers: Qualitative Focus Group Study
title_short Development of a Positive Body Image Chatbot (KIT) With Young People and Parents/Carers: Qualitative Focus Group Study
title_full Development of a Positive Body Image Chatbot (KIT) With Young People and Parents/Carers: Qualitative Focus Group Study
title_fullStr Development of a Positive Body Image Chatbot (KIT) With Young People and Parents/Carers: Qualitative Focus Group Study
title_full_unstemmed Development of a Positive Body Image Chatbot (KIT) With Young People and Parents/Carers: Qualitative Focus Group Study
title_sort development of a positive body image chatbot (kit) with young people and parents/carers: qualitative focus group study
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2021-06-01
description BackgroundBody image and eating disorders represent a significant public health concern; however, many affected individuals never access appropriate treatment. Conversational agents or chatbots reflect a unique opportunity to target those affected online by providing psychoeducation and coping skills, thus filling the gap in service provision. ObjectiveA world-first body image chatbot called “KIT” was designed. The aim of this study was to assess preliminary acceptability and feasibility via the collection of qualitative feedback from young people and parents/carers regarding the content, structure, and design of the chatbot, in accordance with an agile methodology strategy. The chatbot was developed in collaboration with Australia’s national eating disorder support organization, the Butterfly Foundation. MethodsA conversation decision tree was designed that offered psychoeducational information on body image and eating disorders, as well as evidence-based coping strategies. A version of KIT was built as a research prototype to deliver these conversations. Six focus groups were conducted using online semistructured interviews to seek feedback on the KIT prototype. This included four groups of people seeking help for themselves (n=17; age 13-18 years) and two groups of parents/carers (n=8; age 46-57 years). Participants provided feedback on the cartoon chatbot character design, as well as the content, structure, and design of the chatbot webchat. ResultsThematic analyses identified the following three main themes from the six focus groups: (1) chatbot character and design, (2) content presentation, and (3) flow. Overall, the participants provided positive feedback regarding KIT, with both young people and parents/carers generally providing similar reflections. The participants approved of KIT’s character and engagement. Specific suggestions were made regarding the brevity and tone to increase KIT’s interactivity. ConclusionsFocus groups provided overall positive qualitative feedback regarding the content, structure, and design of the body image chatbot. Incorporating the feedback of lived experience from both individuals and parents/carers allowed the refinement of KIT in the development phase as per an iterative agile methodology. Further research is required to evaluate KIT’s efficacy.
url https://www.jmir.org/2021/6/e27807
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