A Review of Persuasive Principles in Mobile Apps for Chronic Arthritis Patients: Opportunities for Improvement

BackgroundChronic arthritis (CA), an umbrella term for inflammatory rheumatic and other musculoskeletal diseases, is highly prevalent. Effective disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs for CA are available, with the exception of osteoarthritis, but require a long-term commitmen...

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Main Authors: Geuens, Jonas, Swinnen, Thijs Willem, Westhovens, Rene, de Vlam, Kurt, Geurts, Luc, Vanden Abeele, Vero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2016-10-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/4/e118/
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spelling doaj-cea7ab23c60e411dbc4a9ba65b856d8b2021-05-03T03:32:52ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222016-10-0144e11810.2196/mhealth.6286A Review of Persuasive Principles in Mobile Apps for Chronic Arthritis Patients: Opportunities for ImprovementGeuens, JonasSwinnen, Thijs WillemWesthovens, Renede Vlam, KurtGeurts, LucVanden Abeele, Vero BackgroundChronic arthritis (CA), an umbrella term for inflammatory rheumatic and other musculoskeletal diseases, is highly prevalent. Effective disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs for CA are available, with the exception of osteoarthritis, but require a long-term commitment of patients to comply with the medication regimen and management program as well as a tight follow-up by the treating physician and health professionals. Additionally, patients are advised to participate in physical exercise programs. Adherence to exercises and physical activity programs is often very low. Patients would benefit from support to increase medication compliance as well as compliance to the physical exercise programs. To address these shortcomings, health apps for CA patients have been created. These mobile apps assist patients in self-management of overall health measures, health prevention, and disease management. By including persuasive principles designed to reinforce, change, or shape attitudes or behaviors, health apps can transform into support tools that motivate and stimulate users to achieve or keep up with target behavior, also called persuasive systems. However, the extent to which health apps for CA patients consciously and successfully employ such persuasive principles remains unknown. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to evaluate the number and type of persuasive principles present in current health apps for CA patients. MethodsA review of apps for arthritis patients was conducted across the three major app stores (Google Play, Apple App Store, and Windows Phone Store). Collected apps were coded according to 37 persuasive principles, based on an altered version of the Persuasive System Design taxonomy of Oinas-Kukkonen and Harjuma and the taxonomy of Behavior Change Techniques of Michie and Abraham. In addition, user ratings, number of installs, and price of the apps were also coded. ResultsWe coded 28 apps. On average, 5.8 out of 37 persuasive principles were used in each app. The most used category of persuasive principles was System Credibility with an average of 2.6 principles. Task Support was the second most used, with an average of 2.3 persuasive principles. Next was Dialogue Support with an average of 0.5 principles. Social Support was last with an average of 0.01 persuasive principles only. ConclusionsCurrent health apps for CA patients would benefit from adding Social Support techniques (eg, social media, user fora) and extending Dialogue Support techniques (eg, rewards, praise). The addition of automated tracking of health-related parameters (eg, physical activity, step count) could further reduce the effort for CA patients to manage their disease and thus increase Task Support. Finally, apps for health could benefit from a more evidence-based approach, both in developing the app as well as ensuring that content can be verified as scientifically proven, which will result in enhanced System Credibility.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/4/e118/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geuens, Jonas
Swinnen, Thijs Willem
Westhovens, Rene
de Vlam, Kurt
Geurts, Luc
Vanden Abeele, Vero
spellingShingle Geuens, Jonas
Swinnen, Thijs Willem
Westhovens, Rene
de Vlam, Kurt
Geurts, Luc
Vanden Abeele, Vero
A Review of Persuasive Principles in Mobile Apps for Chronic Arthritis Patients: Opportunities for Improvement
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Geuens, Jonas
Swinnen, Thijs Willem
Westhovens, Rene
de Vlam, Kurt
Geurts, Luc
Vanden Abeele, Vero
author_sort Geuens, Jonas
title A Review of Persuasive Principles in Mobile Apps for Chronic Arthritis Patients: Opportunities for Improvement
title_short A Review of Persuasive Principles in Mobile Apps for Chronic Arthritis Patients: Opportunities for Improvement
title_full A Review of Persuasive Principles in Mobile Apps for Chronic Arthritis Patients: Opportunities for Improvement
title_fullStr A Review of Persuasive Principles in Mobile Apps for Chronic Arthritis Patients: Opportunities for Improvement
title_full_unstemmed A Review of Persuasive Principles in Mobile Apps for Chronic Arthritis Patients: Opportunities for Improvement
title_sort review of persuasive principles in mobile apps for chronic arthritis patients: opportunities for improvement
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2016-10-01
description BackgroundChronic arthritis (CA), an umbrella term for inflammatory rheumatic and other musculoskeletal diseases, is highly prevalent. Effective disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs for CA are available, with the exception of osteoarthritis, but require a long-term commitment of patients to comply with the medication regimen and management program as well as a tight follow-up by the treating physician and health professionals. Additionally, patients are advised to participate in physical exercise programs. Adherence to exercises and physical activity programs is often very low. Patients would benefit from support to increase medication compliance as well as compliance to the physical exercise programs. To address these shortcomings, health apps for CA patients have been created. These mobile apps assist patients in self-management of overall health measures, health prevention, and disease management. By including persuasive principles designed to reinforce, change, or shape attitudes or behaviors, health apps can transform into support tools that motivate and stimulate users to achieve or keep up with target behavior, also called persuasive systems. However, the extent to which health apps for CA patients consciously and successfully employ such persuasive principles remains unknown. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to evaluate the number and type of persuasive principles present in current health apps for CA patients. MethodsA review of apps for arthritis patients was conducted across the three major app stores (Google Play, Apple App Store, and Windows Phone Store). Collected apps were coded according to 37 persuasive principles, based on an altered version of the Persuasive System Design taxonomy of Oinas-Kukkonen and Harjuma and the taxonomy of Behavior Change Techniques of Michie and Abraham. In addition, user ratings, number of installs, and price of the apps were also coded. ResultsWe coded 28 apps. On average, 5.8 out of 37 persuasive principles were used in each app. The most used category of persuasive principles was System Credibility with an average of 2.6 principles. Task Support was the second most used, with an average of 2.3 persuasive principles. Next was Dialogue Support with an average of 0.5 principles. Social Support was last with an average of 0.01 persuasive principles only. ConclusionsCurrent health apps for CA patients would benefit from adding Social Support techniques (eg, social media, user fora) and extending Dialogue Support techniques (eg, rewards, praise). The addition of automated tracking of health-related parameters (eg, physical activity, step count) could further reduce the effort for CA patients to manage their disease and thus increase Task Support. Finally, apps for health could benefit from a more evidence-based approach, both in developing the app as well as ensuring that content can be verified as scientifically proven, which will result in enhanced System Credibility.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/4/e118/
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