Exploring the usability of a smartphone application to monitor fatigue and activity for people with acquired brain injury
Exploring the usability of a smartphone application to monitor fatigue and activity for people with acquired brain injury
Background: fatigue after acquired brain injury (ABI) leads to detrimental changes in ABI survivors’ daily activities and participation. There is a need capture individual’s experience of fatigue as it happens, to better support self-management of fatigue.
Study aims: to investigate the usability of a real-time tracker of fatigue and activity (using ecological momentary assessment delivered by a smartphone application) and the feasibility of capturing activity and environmental factors using phone sensors.
Methods: participants wore an activity monitor and completed up to eight surveys a day on a smartphone app, for six days, completed the system usability scale (SUS) and were interviewed on their views of using the app. Interview transcripts were analysed using qualitative content analysis. Agreement between data from the phone’s sensors and the activity monitor was analysed using Kappa statistics.
Results: seven participants completed between 11 and 58 surveys. Mean score on the SUS indicated good perceived usability of the app. Phone sensors did not reliably capture physical activity or background noise. Participants found the app easy to use and perceived self-monitoring to help their understanding of fatigue. A fatigue-tracking app may be acceptable to ABI survivors and has potential to aid self-management of fatigue.
Usability; brain injury; fatigue; ecological momentary assessment; mHealth., brain injury, fatigue, ecological momentary assessment, mHealth.
Ezekiel, Leisle
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Veiga, Jose Juan Dominguez
36f38d33-ae94-4f4f-84fd-dbdacf4ea845
Ward, Tomas
6f1903bb-4b79-435b-94f8-4959a7233800
Dawes, Helen
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Collett, Johnny
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Ezekiel, Leisle
aee53f24-cd28-400e-85c1-95c8a9b21f2a
Veiga, Jose Juan Dominguez
36f38d33-ae94-4f4f-84fd-dbdacf4ea845
Ward, Tomas
6f1903bb-4b79-435b-94f8-4959a7233800
Dawes, Helen
34ca6121-9340-4cf3-8d8d-41e0f521ddb1
Collett, Johnny
8614f84c-eea0-4c4d-9662-8ddcc6856337
Ezekiel, Leisle, Veiga, Jose Juan Dominguez, Ward, Tomas, Dawes, Helen and Collett, Johnny
(2023)
Exploring the usability of a smartphone application to monitor fatigue and activity for people with acquired brain injury.
British Journal of Occupational Therapy.
(In Press)
Abstract
Background: fatigue after acquired brain injury (ABI) leads to detrimental changes in ABI survivors’ daily activities and participation. There is a need capture individual’s experience of fatigue as it happens, to better support self-management of fatigue.
Study aims: to investigate the usability of a real-time tracker of fatigue and activity (using ecological momentary assessment delivered by a smartphone application) and the feasibility of capturing activity and environmental factors using phone sensors.
Methods: participants wore an activity monitor and completed up to eight surveys a day on a smartphone app, for six days, completed the system usability scale (SUS) and were interviewed on their views of using the app. Interview transcripts were analysed using qualitative content analysis. Agreement between data from the phone’s sensors and the activity monitor was analysed using Kappa statistics.
Results: seven participants completed between 11 and 58 surveys. Mean score on the SUS indicated good perceived usability of the app. Phone sensors did not reliably capture physical activity or background noise. Participants found the app easy to use and perceived self-monitoring to help their understanding of fatigue. A fatigue-tracking app may be acceptable to ABI survivors and has potential to aid self-management of fatigue.
Text
Ezekiel 2023 usability paper authors version
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 31 May 2023
Additional Information:
For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.
Keywords:
Usability; brain injury; fatigue; ecological momentary assessment; mHealth., brain injury, fatigue, ecological momentary assessment, mHealth.
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 477710
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477710
ISSN: 0308-0226
PURE UUID: eb386378-966d-4965-9610-71916c1a585b
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Date deposited: 13 Jun 2023 17:11
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 02:12
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Contributors
Author:
Leisle Ezekiel
Author:
Jose Juan Dominguez Veiga
Author:
Tomas Ward
Author:
Helen Dawes
Author:
Johnny Collett
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