心理干预
干预(咨询)
说服
行为改变方法
背景(考古学)
自我管理
行为改变
心理学
集合(抽象数据类型)
应用心理学
知识管理
过程管理
医学
计算机科学
护理部
社会心理学
工程类
人工智能
古生物学
生物
程序设计语言
作者
Asma A. Abahussin,Robert West,David Wong,Lucy Ziegler,Matthew J. Allsop
出处
期刊:JMIR cancer
[JMIR Publications Inc.]
日期:2023-10-09
卷期号:9: e49471-e49471
被引量:2
摘要
To inform the development of an intervention, it is essential to have a well-developed theoretical understanding of how an intervention causes change, as stated in the UK Medical Research Council guidelines for developing complex interventions. Theoretical foundations are often ignored in the development of mobile health apps intended to support pain self-management for patients with cancer.This study aims to systematically set a theory- and evidence-driven design for a pain self-management app and specify the app's active features.The Behavior Change Wheel (BCW) framework, a step-by-step theoretical approach to the development of interventions, was adopted to achieve the aim of this study. This started by understanding and identifying sources of behavior that could be targeted to support better pain management. Ultimately, the application of the BCW framework guided the identification of the active contents of the app, which were characterized using the Behavior Change Technique Taxonomy version 1.The theoretical analysis revealed that patients may have deficits in their capability, opportunity, and motivation that prevent them from performing pain self-management. The app needs to use education, persuasion, training, and enablement intervention functions because, based on the analysis, they were found the most likely to address the specified factors. Eighteen behavior change techniques were selected to describe precisely how the intervention functions can be presented to induce the desired change regarding the intervention context. In other words, they were selected to form the active contents of the app, potentially reducing barriers and serving to support patients in the self-management of pain while using the app.This study fully reports the design and development of a pain self-management app underpinned by theory and evidence and intended for patients with cancer. It provides a model example of the BCW framework application for health app development. The work presented in this study is the first systematic theory- and evidence-driven design for a pain app for patients with cancer. This systematic approach can support clarity in evaluating the intervention's underlying mechanisms and support future replication.
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