Barriers and facilitators to parents' engagement with and perceived impact of a childhood obesity app: A mixed-methods study
Barriers and facilitators to parents' engagement with and perceived impact of a childhood obesity app: A mixed-methods study
Childhood obesity is a growing global health concern. Although mobile health apps have the potential to deliver behavioural interventions, their impact is commonly limited by a lack of sufficient engagement. The purpose of this study was to explore barriers and facilitators to engagement with a family-focused app and its perceived impact on motivation, self-efficacy, and behaviour. Parents with at least one child under 18 and healthcare professionals working with children were recruited; all participants were allocated to use the NoObesity app over a 6-month period. The mixed-methods design was based on the Non-adoption, Abandonment, Scale-Up, Spread, and Sustainability and Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance frameworks. Qualitative and quantitative data were gathered through semi-structured interviews, questionnaires, and app use data (logins and in-app self-reported data). 35 parents were included in the final analysis; quantitative results were analysed descriptively and thematic analysis was conducted on the qualitative data. Key barriers to engagement were boredom, forgetting, and usability issues and key barriers to potential impact on behaviours were accessibility, lack of motivation, and family characteristics. Novelty, gamification features, reminders, goal setting, progress monitoring and feedback, and suggestions for healthy foods and activities were key facilitators to engagement with the app and behaviours. A key observation was that intervention strategies could help address many motivation and capability barriers, but there was a gap in strategies addressing opportunity barriers. Without incorporating strategies that successfully mitigate barriers in all three determinants of behaviour, an intervention is unlikely to be successful. We highlight key recommendations for developers to consider when designing the features and implementation of digital health interventions. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05261555).
e0000481
Milne-Ives, Madison
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Rahman, Em
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Bradwell, Hannah
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Baines, Rebecca
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Boey, Timothy
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Potter, Alison
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Lawrence, Wendy
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Helena van Velthoven, Michelle
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Meinert, Edward
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27 March 2024
Milne-Ives, Madison
90d92c68-0233-4096-b1a5-6c9b094d99cc
Rahman, Em
40dcaa0e-bf4a-4efa-928e-4c162b5030b7
Bradwell, Hannah
b30292e5-0312-40e1-a3a2-8d62fcc80751
Baines, Rebecca
3913b2bd-f503-4df6-aaba-e1cdc8315699
Boey, Timothy
eee6a796-57d5-4730-8193-9a7ee9f68509
Potter, Alison
aab3c236-47af-4afc-891f-71a002467ace
Lawrence, Wendy
e9babc0a-02c9-41df-a289-7b18f17bf7d8
Helena van Velthoven, Michelle
26ef95db-1e92-4d64-b973-6c07d199f8ce
Meinert, Edward
d76fab21-3708-4b09-8466-d2fd4e5e5bee
Milne-Ives, Madison, Rahman, Em, Bradwell, Hannah, Baines, Rebecca, Boey, Timothy, Potter, Alison, Lawrence, Wendy, Helena van Velthoven, Michelle and Meinert, Edward
(2024)
Barriers and facilitators to parents' engagement with and perceived impact of a childhood obesity app: A mixed-methods study.
PLOS digital health, 3 (3), , [e0000481].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pdig.0000481).
Abstract
Childhood obesity is a growing global health concern. Although mobile health apps have the potential to deliver behavioural interventions, their impact is commonly limited by a lack of sufficient engagement. The purpose of this study was to explore barriers and facilitators to engagement with a family-focused app and its perceived impact on motivation, self-efficacy, and behaviour. Parents with at least one child under 18 and healthcare professionals working with children were recruited; all participants were allocated to use the NoObesity app over a 6-month period. The mixed-methods design was based on the Non-adoption, Abandonment, Scale-Up, Spread, and Sustainability and Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance frameworks. Qualitative and quantitative data were gathered through semi-structured interviews, questionnaires, and app use data (logins and in-app self-reported data). 35 parents were included in the final analysis; quantitative results were analysed descriptively and thematic analysis was conducted on the qualitative data. Key barriers to engagement were boredom, forgetting, and usability issues and key barriers to potential impact on behaviours were accessibility, lack of motivation, and family characteristics. Novelty, gamification features, reminders, goal setting, progress monitoring and feedback, and suggestions for healthy foods and activities were key facilitators to engagement with the app and behaviours. A key observation was that intervention strategies could help address many motivation and capability barriers, but there was a gap in strategies addressing opportunity barriers. Without incorporating strategies that successfully mitigate barriers in all three determinants of behaviour, an intervention is unlikely to be successful. We highlight key recommendations for developers to consider when designing the features and implementation of digital health interventions. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05261555).
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journal.pdig.0000481
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 February 2024
Published date: 27 March 2024
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Copyright: © 2024 Milne-Ives et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Local EPrints ID: 488689
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488689
ISSN: 2767-3170
PURE UUID: a0518e1f-9d8a-46c1-b4db-5ead81127df4
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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2024 16:42
Last modified: 02 Nov 2024 02:38
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Author:
Madison Milne-Ives
Author:
Em Rahman
Author:
Hannah Bradwell
Author:
Rebecca Baines
Author:
Timothy Boey
Author:
Alison Potter
Author:
Michelle Helena van Velthoven
Author:
Edward Meinert
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