Abstract
BackgroundThis paper provides three illustrations of how the “person-based approach” can be used to assess and enhance the acceptability and feasibility of an intervention during the early stages of development and evaluation. The person-based approach involves using mixed methods research to systematically investigate the beliefs, attitudes, needs and situation of the people who will be using the intervention. The in-depth understanding of users’ perspectives derived from this research then enables intervention developers to design or modify the intervention to make it more relevant, persuasive, accessible and engaging.MethodsThe first illustration describes how relevant beliefs and attitudes of people with asthma were identified from the existing qualitative and quantitative literature and then used to create guiding principles to inform the design of a web-based intervention to improve quality of life. The second illustration describes how qualitative “think-aloud” interviews and patient and public involvement (PPI) input are used to improve the acceptability of a booklet for people with asthma. In the third illustration, iterative think-aloud methods are used to create a more accurate and accessible activity planner for people with diabetes.ResultsIn the first illustration of the person-based approach, we present the guiding principles we developed to summarise key design issues/objectives and key intervention features to address them. The second illustration provides evidence from interviews that positive, non-medical messages and images were preferred in booklet materials for people with asthma. The third illustration demonstrates that people with diabetes found it difficult to complete an online activity planner accurately, resulting in incorrect personalised advice being given prior to appropriate modification of the planner.ConclusionsThe person-based approach to intervention development can complement theory- and evidence-based development and participant input into intervention design, offering a systematic process for systematically investigating and incorporating the views of a wide range of users.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40814-015-0033-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
This paper provides three illustrations of how the “person-based approach” can be used to assess and enhance the acceptability and feasibility of an intervention during the early stages of development and evaluation
During the intervention planning phase, we have found it useful to produce guiding principles consisting of two elements: intervention design objectives, and key features of the intervention that can achieve these objectives
It is preferable to begin to formulate them at an early stage in order to inform intervention planning—but in the initial stages of intervention planning, it is necessary to base them on incomplete evidence from literature review and primary research
Summary
This paper provides three illustrations of how the “person-based approach” can be used to assess and enhance the acceptability and feasibility of an intervention during the early stages of development and evaluation. The person-based approach involves using mixed methods research to systematically investigate the beliefs, attitudes, needs and situation of the people who will be using the intervention. The person-based approach involves carrying out mixed methods research (e.g. interviews, focus groups, observation, questionnaire studies) to systematically investigate the beliefs, attitudes, needs and situation of the people who will be using the intervention in order to identify intervention components that are likely to be necessary, feasible and salient [2, 3]. The intervention is modified on the basis of this research, and further evaluation is carried out to check whether the changes made have succeeded in making the intervention acceptable, interesting, and easy to use and adhere to
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