Abstract

BackgroundApproximately 10% of adolescents in the United States have asthma. Adolescents widely use apps on mobile phones and tablet technology for social networking and gaming purposes. Given the increase in recreational app use among adolescents, leveraging apps to support adolescent asthma disease management seems warranted. However, little empirical research has influenced asthma app development; adolescent users are seldom involved in the app design process.ObjectiveThe aim of this mixed-methods study was to assess adolescent preferences and design recommendations for an asthma self-management app.MethodsA total of 20 adolescents with persistent asthma (aged 12-16 years) provided feedback on two asthma self-management apps during in-person semistructured interviews following their regularly scheduled asthma clinic visit and via telephone 1 week later. Interviews were audiorecorded, transcribed verbatim, analyzed using SPSS v24, and coded thematically using MAXQDA 11.ResultsRegarding esthetics, app layout and perceived visual simplicity were important to facilitate initial app use. Adolescents were more likely to continually engage with apps that were deemed useful and met their informational needs. Adolescents also desired app features that fit within their existing paradigm or schema and included familiar components (eg, medication alerts that appear and sound like FaceTime notifications and games modeled after Quiz Up and Minecraft), as well as the ability to customize app components. They also suggested that apps include other features, such as an air quality tracker and voice command.ConclusionsAdolescents desire specific app characteristics including customization and tailoring to meet their asthma informational needs. Involving adolescents in early stages of app development is likely to result in an asthma app that meets their self-management needs and design preferences and ultimately the adoption and maintenance of positive asthma self-management behaviors.

Highlights

  • In the United States, 1 in 10 adolescents have asthma [1], and poorly controlled asthma among children and adolescents can lead to greater health resource utilization and health care expenditures estimated at US $5.35 billion per year [2]

  • Adolescents are early adopters of technology and mobile app use is increasing among the adolescent population, only 8 out of 147 asthma apps are targeted toward children or young adults [5]

  • (15/20) adolescents said that they enjoyed spending time on social media, and the site(s) that adolescents reported using most of the time were Facebook (11/20, 55%), Instagram (8/20, 40%), Twitter (5/20, 25%), and Pinterest (3/20, 15%)

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Summary

Introduction

In the United States, 1 in 10 adolescents have asthma [1], and poorly controlled asthma among children and adolescents (aged 6-17 years) can lead to greater health resource utilization and health care expenditures estimated at US $5.35 billion per year [2]. Negative health outcomes can be drastically reduced and prevented through proper disease self-management [3], and leveraging technology to support adolescent asthma management seems warranted. Adolescents are early adopters of technology and mobile app use is increasing among the adolescent population, only 8 out of 147 asthma apps are targeted toward children or young adults [5]. Qualitative research on adolescent preferences for health apps, including how they perceive and would use apps to support their asthma self-management, has been lacking [11,12]. Given the increase in recreational app use among adolescents, leveraging apps to support adolescent asthma disease management seems warranted. Little empirical research has influenced asthma app development; adolescent users are seldom involved in the app design process

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