Mobile Health Apps to Facilitate Self-Care: A Qualitative Study of User Experiences
Abstract
Consumers are living longer, creating more pressure on the health system and increasing their requirement for self-care of chronic conditions. Despite rapidly-increasing numbers of mobile health applications ('apps') for consumers' self-care, there is a paucity of research into consumer engagement with electronic self-monitoring. This paper presents a qualitative exploration of how health consumers use apps for health monitoring, their perceived benefits from use of health apps, and suggestions for improvement of health apps.
'Health app' was defined as any commercially-available health or fitness app with capacity for self-monitoring. English-speaking consumers aged 18 years and older using any health app for self-monitoring were recruited for interview from the metropolitan area of Perth, Australia. The semi-structured interview guide comprised questions based on the Technology Acceptance Model, Health Information Technology Acceptance Model, and the Mobile Application Rating Scale, and is the only study to do so. These models also facilitated deductive thematic analysis of interview transcripts. Implicit and explicit responses not aligned to these models were analyzed inductively.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 77.93
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 66
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Thematic analysis
- Session (web analytics)
- Health care
- Qualitative research
- Medicine
- Psychology
- Applied psychology
- Medical education
- Good health and well-being