Digital Health (Jun 2024)

Patients’ acceptability of self-selected digital health services to support diet and exercise among people with complex chronic conditions: Mixed methods study

  • Amandine Barnett,
  • Soraia de Camargo Catapan,
  • Dev K Jegatheesan,
  • Marguerite M Conley,
  • Shelley E Keating,
  • Hannah L Mayr,
  • Lindsey Webb,
  • Riley C C Brown,
  • Jeff S Coombes,
  • Graeme A Macdonald,
  • Nicole M Isbel,
  • Nicola W Burton,
  • Katrina L Campbell,
  • Ingrid J Hickman,
  • Jaimon T Kelly

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076241245278
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Objective The acceptability of being offered a choice from a suite of digital health service options to support optimal diet and exercise behaviors in adults with complex chronic conditions was evaluated. This study sought to understand many areas of acceptability including satisfaction, ease of use, usefulness and user appropriateness and perceived effectiveness. Methods This mixed-methods study was embedded within a randomized-controlled feasibility trial providing digital health services managing diet and exercise for adults from specialist kidney and liver disease clinics. Post study surveys and semistructured interviews were used to determine patients’ acceptability of the trial interventions. Quantitative (surveys) and qualitative (surveys and interviews) results were merged using integrative analysis and mapped to each construct of the modified version of the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability. Results Seventeen interviews (intervention group) and 50 surveys ( n = 24 intervention, n = 26 comparator) completed from a possible 67 participants were analyzed. In the intervention group, the survey results revealed high areas of acceptability for the digital health services including overall support received, ease of use, timely advice and feeling safe. The interviews also revealed high areas of acceptability including convenience, ability to adopt healthier behaviors and having regular interactions with health professionals. However, the interviews also revealed lower areas of acceptability as a result of absence of individualization, low digital literacy, and limitations from life circumstances. Conclusions Recipients of digital health services that supported diet and exercise interventions found these useful, effective, and safe. Individualized care, technical support and patient confidence remain important to improve the acceptability of digital health service interventions.