MobileMen: the development of a mobile application to promote physical activity in African American men.

IF 2.2 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
mHealth Pub Date : 2025-07-14 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.21037/mhealth-24-82
Amanda N Brice, Steve Fullmer, Charles Barger, Joel Serbinski, Michael Gallik, Phillip Nauta, Damon L Swift, April J Stull, David B Buller, Derek M Griffith, Kayla Nuss, Robert L Newton
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Abstract

Background: African American men experience higher rates of chronic diseases including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and obesity compared to other race and gender groups. This population also has high levels of inactivity, one of the major risk facts for chronic disease. Due to the promise shown by mobile applications (apps) in providing tailored and easily accessible health interventions, we aimed to build an app designed for African American men to initiate and maintain their physical activity (PA) called MobileMen.

Methods: We conducted focus groups (n=24) with African American men to gain insight on the features and design aspects to include in the app prototype. We then used an iterative design process by conducting multiple rounds of beta (n=14) and useability (n=16) testing to create a prototype that was easy to use, visually pleasing, and culturally tailored. A satisfaction and helpfulness questionnaire and the System Usability Scale (SUS) were used as quantitative measures in addition to qualitative data provided by participants. Tasks were given to participants to test for ability to navigate and use the app features.

Results: The average satisfaction and helpfulness ratings from participants were 3.9/5 and 3.7/5 for beta testing and 4.3/5 and 4.1/5 for usability testing, which met the pre-determined criteria of ≥3.5. Only one of the satisfaction questions, which was about cultural tailoring for African American men, was below the pre-determined criteria (2.7). By round two of usability testing, the majority of tasks were able to be completed by all of the participants and the mean SUS score was 90.36 out of 100 which exceeded a priori feasibility criterion of a mean rating of 68.0. The feedback on the finalized features was positive, and participants expressed that they would use the app if it were on the market.

Conclusions: Based on both the qualitative and quantitative data obtained from multiple iterative design rounds, the MobileMen app was well received by the target population and is ready to be tested on a larger scale for effectiveness. The app is easy to use and contains culturally tailored features.

Abstract Image

MobileMen:开发一款移动应用程序,以促进非裔美国男性的体育活动。
背景:与其他种族和性别群体相比,非裔美国男性患慢性疾病的几率更高,包括糖尿病、心血管疾病和肥胖症。这一人群缺乏运动的程度也很高,这是慢性病的主要风险因素之一。由于移动应用程序(app)在提供量身定制且易于获取的健康干预措施方面显示出的前景,我们旨在构建一款专为非洲裔美国男性设计的应用程序,以启动并保持他们的身体活动(PA),称为MobileMen。方法:我们针对非裔美国男性进行了焦点小组调查(n=24),以深入了解应用原型的功能和设计方面。然后,我们通过进行多轮测试(n=14)和可用性测试(n=16)来使用迭代设计过程,以创建易于使用,视觉上令人愉悦且符合文化的原型。除了参与者提供的定性数据外,还使用满意度和有用性问卷和系统可用性量表(SUS)作为定量测量。研究人员给参与者分配了任务,测试他们导航和使用应用程序功能的能力。结果:参与者的平均满意度和帮助性评分在beta测试中分别为3.9/5分和3.7/5分,在可用性测试中分别为4.3/5分和4.1/5分,均满足预先设定的≥3.5分标准。在满意度问题中,只有一个关于非裔美国男性的文化剪裁的问题低于预定的标准(2.7)。通过第二轮可用性测试,大多数任务都能够由所有参与者完成,平均SUS得分为90.36分(满分100分),超过了平均评分68.0的先验可行性标准。对最终功能的反馈是积极的,参与者表示,如果这款应用上市,他们会使用它。结论:基于多次迭代设计获得的定性和定量数据,MobileMen应用程序受到目标人群的欢迎,可以进行更大规模的有效性测试。该应用程序易于使用,并包含适合不同文化的功能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
5.40
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