JMIR Formative Research (Jan 2022)

The Challenges in Designing a Prevention Chatbot for Eating Disorders: Observational Study

  • William W Chan,
  • Ellen E Fitzsimmons-Craft,
  • Arielle C Smith,
  • Marie-Laure Firebaugh,
  • Lauren A Fowler,
  • Bianca DePietro,
  • Naira Topooco,
  • Denise E Wilfley,
  • C Barr Taylor,
  • Nicholas C Jacobson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/28003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. e28003

Abstract

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BackgroundChatbots have the potential to provide cost-effective mental health prevention programs at scale and increase interactivity, ease of use, and accessibility of intervention programs. ObjectiveThe development of chatbot prevention for eating disorders (EDs) is still in its infancy. Our aim is to present examples of and solutions to challenges in designing and refining a rule-based prevention chatbot program for EDs, targeted at adult women at risk for developing an ED. MethodsParticipants were 2409 individuals who at least began to use an EDs prevention chatbot in response to social media advertising. Over 6 months, the research team reviewed up to 52,129 comments from these users to identify inappropriate responses that negatively impacted users’ experience and technical glitches. Problems identified by reviewers were then presented to the entire research team, who then generated possible solutions and implemented new responses. ResultsThe most common problem with the chatbot was a general limitation in understanding and responding appropriately to unanticipated user responses. We developed several workarounds to limit these problems while retaining some interactivity. ConclusionsRule-based chatbots have the potential to reach large populations at low cost but are limited in understanding and responding appropriately to unanticipated user responses. They can be most effective in providing information and simple conversations. Workarounds can reduce conversation errors.