Abstract

BackgroundConversational agents (CAs) for chronic disease management are receiving increasing attention in academia and the industry. However, long-term adherence to CAs is still a challenge and needs to be explored. Personalization of CAs has the potential to improve long-term adherence and, with it, user satisfaction, task efficiency, perceived benefits, and intended behavior change. Research on personalized CAs has already addressed different aspects, such as personalized recommendations and anthropomorphic cues. However, detailed information on interaction styles between patients and CAs in the role of medical health care professionals is scant. Such interaction styles play essential roles for patient satisfaction, treatment adherence, and outcome, as has been shown for physician-patient interactions. Currently, it is not clear (1) whether chronically ill patients prefer a CA with a paternalistic, informative, interpretive, or deliberative interaction style, and (2) which factors influence these preferences.ObjectiveWe aimed to investigate the preferences of chronically ill patients for CA-delivered interaction styles.MethodsWe conducted two studies. The first study included a paper-based approach and explored the preferences of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients for paternalistic, informative, interpretive, and deliberative CA-delivered interaction styles. Based on these results, a second study assessed the effects of the paternalistic and deliberative interaction styles on the relationship quality between the CA and patients via hierarchical multiple linear regression analyses in an online experiment with COPD patients. Patients’ sociodemographic and disease-specific characteristics served as moderator variables.ResultsStudy 1 with 117 COPD patients revealed a preference for the deliberative (50/117) and informative (34/117) interaction styles across demographic characteristics. All patients who preferred the paternalistic style over the other interaction styles had more severe COPD (three patients, Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease class 3 or 4). In Study 2 with 123 newly recruited COPD patients, younger participants and participants with a less recent COPD diagnosis scored higher on interaction-related outcomes when interacting with a CA that delivered the deliberative interaction style (interaction between age and CA type: relationship quality: b=−0.77, 95% CI −1.37 to −0.18; intention to continue interaction: b=−0.49, 95% CI −0.97 to −0.01; working alliance attachment bond: b=−0.65, 95% CI −1.26 to −0.04; working alliance goal agreement: b=−0.59, 95% CI −1.18 to −0.01; interaction between recency of COPD diagnosis and CA type: working alliance goal agreement: b=0.57, 95% CI 0.01 to 1.13).ConclusionsOur results indicate that age and a patient’s personal disease experience inform which CA interaction style the patient should be paired with to achieve increased interaction-related outcomes with the CA. These results allow the design of personalized health care CAs with the goal to increase long-term adherence to health-promoting behavior.

Highlights

  • The occurrence of chronic diseases is on the rise owing to greater longevity of the population, increasing exposure to environmental pollution, and unhealthy lifestyles [1]

  • In Study 2 with 123 newly recruited chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients, younger participants and participants with a less recent COPD diagnosis scored higher on interaction-related outcomes when interacting with a conversational agent COPD (CA) that delivered the deliberative interaction style

  • The interaction style between patients and physicians is recognized as a critical parameter for patient satisfaction, treatment adherence, and subsequent treatment outcome and, as such, plays a paramount role for chronic disease management

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Summary

Introduction

The occurrence of chronic diseases is on the rise owing to greater longevity of the population, increasing exposure to environmental pollution, and unhealthy lifestyles [1]. As chronic diseases are not curable, related care is directed toward improving the functional status, reducing distressing symptoms, extending life duration through secondary prevention, and improving health-related quality of life [2,3]. This requires comprehensive and personalized disease management based on active long-term collaboration between health care practitioners and chronically ill patients [1]. Detailed information on interaction styles between patients and CAs in the role of medical health care professionals is scant Such interaction styles play essential roles for patient satisfaction, treatment adherence, and outcome, as has been shown for physician-patient interactions. It is not clear (1) whether chronically ill patients prefer a CA with a paternalistic, informative, interpretive, or deliberative interaction style, and (2) which factors influence these preferences

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