A Breastfeed-Promoting Mobile App Intervention: Usability and Usefulness Study

BackgroundBreastfeeding is proven to have lasting health benefits for both mothers and infants; however, 6-month exclusive breastfeeding rate remains below 20% in Thailand. Although the number of research literature and commercial apps for breastfeeding women is significantly...

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Main Authors: Wang, Chih-Jau, Chaovalit, Pimwadee, Pongnumkul, Suporn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2018-01-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/1/e27/
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spelling doaj-fc615f4057784ca28aa926633b3a15492021-05-03T04:33:04ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222018-01-0161e2710.2196/mhealth.8337A Breastfeed-Promoting Mobile App Intervention: Usability and Usefulness StudyWang, Chih-JauChaovalit, PimwadeePongnumkul, Suporn BackgroundBreastfeeding is proven to have lasting health benefits for both mothers and infants; however, 6-month exclusive breastfeeding rate remains below 20% in Thailand. Although the number of research literature and commercial apps for breastfeeding women is significantly growing, they are country-specific and restricted to English-speaking users. There exists a major knowledge gap on how mobile health apps could support breastfeeding in Thailand. To address these gaps, MoomMae has been developed with the intention to support Thai women in breastfeeding outside of their homes and in keeping their feeding records. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to evaluate the usability and usefulness of MoomMae, a mobile phone app designed to support breastfeeding women. MethodsOur study was reviewed and approved by Thailand’s National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA) ethics committee. A total of 21 breastfeeding women with at least one Android phone or tablet were recruited via convenience and snowball sampling. The study process for each participant was as follows: the participant was requested to attend a preuse interview and given the app to use for 4 weeks. Following this period, a postuse interview was conducted to examine the usability and usefulness of the app. Both sessions were held individually and audiorecorded for qualitative analysis. ResultsThe mean scores of usability and usefulness from the postuse survey were 4.33 (SD 0.87; range 1-5) and 4.60 (SD 0.74; range 2-5). Our qualitative analysis revealed a total of 137 feedbacks: 71 related to usability and 66 associated with usefulness. A further sentimental analysis showed that comments on usability were generally negative (59 negative, 11 positive, and 1 neutral), and comments on usefulness were relatively positive (56 positive, 9 negative, and 1 neutral). We discovered 26 unique design issues and proposed recommendations for future improvement. ConclusionsOur usability and usefulness assessment of MoomMae demonstrated that MoomMae has a great potential to be a useful self-management tool for breastfeeding mothers in Thailand. The qualitative analysis suggested that the app is supportive of breastfeeding on demand, but the flow and inputs of the app should be redesigned to be more intuitive. For future implementations, the most desirable feature is a pump-reminding notification system.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/1/e27/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wang, Chih-Jau
Chaovalit, Pimwadee
Pongnumkul, Suporn
spellingShingle Wang, Chih-Jau
Chaovalit, Pimwadee
Pongnumkul, Suporn
A Breastfeed-Promoting Mobile App Intervention: Usability and Usefulness Study
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Wang, Chih-Jau
Chaovalit, Pimwadee
Pongnumkul, Suporn
author_sort Wang, Chih-Jau
title A Breastfeed-Promoting Mobile App Intervention: Usability and Usefulness Study
title_short A Breastfeed-Promoting Mobile App Intervention: Usability and Usefulness Study
title_full A Breastfeed-Promoting Mobile App Intervention: Usability and Usefulness Study
title_fullStr A Breastfeed-Promoting Mobile App Intervention: Usability and Usefulness Study
title_full_unstemmed A Breastfeed-Promoting Mobile App Intervention: Usability and Usefulness Study
title_sort breastfeed-promoting mobile app intervention: usability and usefulness study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2018-01-01
description BackgroundBreastfeeding is proven to have lasting health benefits for both mothers and infants; however, 6-month exclusive breastfeeding rate remains below 20% in Thailand. Although the number of research literature and commercial apps for breastfeeding women is significantly growing, they are country-specific and restricted to English-speaking users. There exists a major knowledge gap on how mobile health apps could support breastfeeding in Thailand. To address these gaps, MoomMae has been developed with the intention to support Thai women in breastfeeding outside of their homes and in keeping their feeding records. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to evaluate the usability and usefulness of MoomMae, a mobile phone app designed to support breastfeeding women. MethodsOur study was reviewed and approved by Thailand’s National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA) ethics committee. A total of 21 breastfeeding women with at least one Android phone or tablet were recruited via convenience and snowball sampling. The study process for each participant was as follows: the participant was requested to attend a preuse interview and given the app to use for 4 weeks. Following this period, a postuse interview was conducted to examine the usability and usefulness of the app. Both sessions were held individually and audiorecorded for qualitative analysis. ResultsThe mean scores of usability and usefulness from the postuse survey were 4.33 (SD 0.87; range 1-5) and 4.60 (SD 0.74; range 2-5). Our qualitative analysis revealed a total of 137 feedbacks: 71 related to usability and 66 associated with usefulness. A further sentimental analysis showed that comments on usability were generally negative (59 negative, 11 positive, and 1 neutral), and comments on usefulness were relatively positive (56 positive, 9 negative, and 1 neutral). We discovered 26 unique design issues and proposed recommendations for future improvement. ConclusionsOur usability and usefulness assessment of MoomMae demonstrated that MoomMae has a great potential to be a useful self-management tool for breastfeeding mothers in Thailand. The qualitative analysis suggested that the app is supportive of breastfeeding on demand, but the flow and inputs of the app should be redesigned to be more intuitive. For future implementations, the most desirable feature is a pump-reminding notification system.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/1/e27/
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