Designing a Tablet-Based Software App for Mapping Bodily Symptoms: Usability Evaluation and Reproducibility Analysis

BackgroundSymptom drawings are widely used as a qualitative and quantitative method of assessing pain symptoms for both clinical and research purposes. As electronic drawings offer many advantages over classical pen-and-paper drawings, the last years have seen a shift toward...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Neubert, Till-Ansgar, Dusch, Martin, Karst, Matthias, Beissner, Florian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2018-05-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/5/e127/
id doaj-8493db4886a041bdae4c9b1bf858876a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8493db4886a041bdae4c9b1bf858876a2021-05-03T04:33:04ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222018-05-0165e12710.2196/mhealth.8409Designing a Tablet-Based Software App for Mapping Bodily Symptoms: Usability Evaluation and Reproducibility AnalysisNeubert, Till-AnsgarDusch, MartinKarst, MatthiasBeissner, Florian BackgroundSymptom drawings are widely used as a qualitative and quantitative method of assessing pain symptoms for both clinical and research purposes. As electronic drawings offer many advantages over classical pen-and-paper drawings, the last years have seen a shift toward tablet-based acquisition of symptom drawings. However, software that is used in clinical care requires special attention to usability aspects and design to provide easy access for physically impaired or elderly patients. ObjectiveThe aims of this project were to develop a new tablet-based software app specifically designed to collect patients’ and doctors’ drawings of pain and related bodily symptoms and test it for usability in 2 samples of chronic pain patients (Aim 1) and their treating doctors (Aim 2) as well as for test-retest reliability (Aim 3). MethodsIn 2 separate studies, symptom drawings from 103 chronic pain patients and their treating doctors were collected using 2 different versions of the app. Both patients and doctors evaluated usability aspects of the app through questionnaires. Results from study 1 were used to improve certain features of the app, which were then evaluated in study 2. Furthermore, a subgroup of 25 patients in study 2 created 2 consecutive symptom drawings for test-retest reproducibility analysis. Usability of both app versions was compared, and reproducibility was calculated for symptom extent, number of symptom clusters, and the whole symptom pattern. ResultsThe changes we made to the app and the body outline led to significant improvements in patients’ usability evaluation regarding the identification with the body outline (P=.007) and the evaluation of symptom depth (P=.02), and the overall difficultness of the drawing process (P=.003) improved significantly. Doctors’ usability evaluation of the final app showed good usability with 75.63 (SD 19.51) points on the System Usability Scale, Attrakdiff 2 scores from 0.93 to 1.41, and ISONORM 9241/10 scores from −0.05 to 1.80. Test-retest analysis showed excellent reproducibility for pain extent (intraclass correlation coefficient, ICC=0.92) and good results for the number of symptom clusters (ICC=0.70) and a mean overlap of 0.47 (Jaccard index). ConclusionsWe developed a tablet-based symptom drawing app and improved it based on usability assessment in a sample of chronic pain patients and their treating doctors. Increases in usability of the improved app comprised identification with the body outline, symptom depth evaluation, and difficultness of the drawing process. Test-retest reliability of symptom drawings by chronic pain patients showed fair to excellent reproducibility. Patients’ usability evaluation is an important factor that should not be neglected when designing apps for mobile or eHealth apps.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/5/e127/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neubert, Till-Ansgar
Dusch, Martin
Karst, Matthias
Beissner, Florian
spellingShingle Neubert, Till-Ansgar
Dusch, Martin
Karst, Matthias
Beissner, Florian
Designing a Tablet-Based Software App for Mapping Bodily Symptoms: Usability Evaluation and Reproducibility Analysis
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Neubert, Till-Ansgar
Dusch, Martin
Karst, Matthias
Beissner, Florian
author_sort Neubert, Till-Ansgar
title Designing a Tablet-Based Software App for Mapping Bodily Symptoms: Usability Evaluation and Reproducibility Analysis
title_short Designing a Tablet-Based Software App for Mapping Bodily Symptoms: Usability Evaluation and Reproducibility Analysis
title_full Designing a Tablet-Based Software App for Mapping Bodily Symptoms: Usability Evaluation and Reproducibility Analysis
title_fullStr Designing a Tablet-Based Software App for Mapping Bodily Symptoms: Usability Evaluation and Reproducibility Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Designing a Tablet-Based Software App for Mapping Bodily Symptoms: Usability Evaluation and Reproducibility Analysis
title_sort designing a tablet-based software app for mapping bodily symptoms: usability evaluation and reproducibility analysis
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2018-05-01
description BackgroundSymptom drawings are widely used as a qualitative and quantitative method of assessing pain symptoms for both clinical and research purposes. As electronic drawings offer many advantages over classical pen-and-paper drawings, the last years have seen a shift toward tablet-based acquisition of symptom drawings. However, software that is used in clinical care requires special attention to usability aspects and design to provide easy access for physically impaired or elderly patients. ObjectiveThe aims of this project were to develop a new tablet-based software app specifically designed to collect patients’ and doctors’ drawings of pain and related bodily symptoms and test it for usability in 2 samples of chronic pain patients (Aim 1) and their treating doctors (Aim 2) as well as for test-retest reliability (Aim 3). MethodsIn 2 separate studies, symptom drawings from 103 chronic pain patients and their treating doctors were collected using 2 different versions of the app. Both patients and doctors evaluated usability aspects of the app through questionnaires. Results from study 1 were used to improve certain features of the app, which were then evaluated in study 2. Furthermore, a subgroup of 25 patients in study 2 created 2 consecutive symptom drawings for test-retest reproducibility analysis. Usability of both app versions was compared, and reproducibility was calculated for symptom extent, number of symptom clusters, and the whole symptom pattern. ResultsThe changes we made to the app and the body outline led to significant improvements in patients’ usability evaluation regarding the identification with the body outline (P=.007) and the evaluation of symptom depth (P=.02), and the overall difficultness of the drawing process (P=.003) improved significantly. Doctors’ usability evaluation of the final app showed good usability with 75.63 (SD 19.51) points on the System Usability Scale, Attrakdiff 2 scores from 0.93 to 1.41, and ISONORM 9241/10 scores from −0.05 to 1.80. Test-retest analysis showed excellent reproducibility for pain extent (intraclass correlation coefficient, ICC=0.92) and good results for the number of symptom clusters (ICC=0.70) and a mean overlap of 0.47 (Jaccard index). ConclusionsWe developed a tablet-based symptom drawing app and improved it based on usability assessment in a sample of chronic pain patients and their treating doctors. Increases in usability of the improved app comprised identification with the body outline, symptom depth evaluation, and difficultness of the drawing process. Test-retest reliability of symptom drawings by chronic pain patients showed fair to excellent reproducibility. Patients’ usability evaluation is an important factor that should not be neglected when designing apps for mobile or eHealth apps.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/5/e127/
work_keys_str_mv AT neuberttillansgar designingatabletbasedsoftwareappformappingbodilysymptomsusabilityevaluationandreproducibilityanalysis
AT duschmartin designingatabletbasedsoftwareappformappingbodilysymptomsusabilityevaluationandreproducibilityanalysis
AT karstmatthias designingatabletbasedsoftwareappformappingbodilysymptomsusabilityevaluationandreproducibilityanalysis
AT beissnerflorian designingatabletbasedsoftwareappformappingbodilysymptomsusabilityevaluationandreproducibilityanalysis
_version_ 1721484247101865984