父母对促进学龄前儿童健康生活方式行为的移动应用程序的优先级和功能的看法:混合方法评估。

IF 2.1 Q2 PEDIATRICS
Jessica R Thompson, Summer J Weber, Shelagh A Mulvaney, Susanna Goggans, Madeline Brown, Anthony Faiola, Lynn Maamari, Pamela C Hull
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:学龄前儿童的父母是干预措施的重点,以塑造健康的生活方式行为,并支持从早期开始降低肥胖风险。鉴于使用移动技术促进幼儿健康生活方式行为的现有证据有限,我们试图收集家长关于移动应用程序的优先事项,该应用程序侧重于在饮食、身体活动、媒体使用和睡眠等领域指导目标设定。目的:本研究的目的是探讨2- 5岁儿童家长的优先事项和需求,以指导使用新颖的融合混合方法开发旨在促进健康生活方式行为的移动应用程序的内容和功能。方法:2021年11月至12月,我们邀请肯塔基州的家长或监护人完成一系列基于网络的概念映射活动和半结构化访谈(共30例)。使用两个项目列表,重点关注(1)父母优先级(内容区域)和(2)应用程序功能,我们要求参与者对每个列表进行概念映射程序:一个基于网络的排序活动,参与者将项目分组到对他们有意义的主题堆中,以及一个评级活动,参与者在5分李克特量表上对每个项目进行评级。定性访谈被逐字记录,编码,然后通过不断的比较分析来确定主题。我们使用概念映射过程中的定量结果对定性访谈的主题进行三角测量,并生成可能的应用内容区域和功能。结果:概念映射结果得到2张3聚类概念图。对于父母的优先事项,参与者确定了建立健康的饮食习惯、形成界限和建立良好的关系;对于应用程序功能,参与者集群包括健康饮食、使用应用程序和设定目标。访谈主题也代表了这两个领域。总的来说,参与者表示,当涉及到在学龄前儿童中建立健康行为时,最优先考虑的是总体健康和幸福,日常生活和设定界限,以及食物和健康饮食。家长们表示,快速、简单、儿童友好的食谱、目标跟踪、提示和通知的使用是他们最看重的功能。结论:这项研究有助于了解幼儿的父母或照顾者对移动应用程序的需求,包括内容和功能,以支持建立健康的行为和惯例。这些发现可以为未来对现有或新的移动应用程序的开发和评估提供信息。为满足家庭需求而确定的特定应用程序功能应该与不同的家庭紧密设计,并使用严格的设计进行测试,以确定移动应用程序可能用于有效健康育儿结果的行动机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Parental Perceptions of Priorities and Features for a Mobile App to Promote Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors in Preschool Children: Mixed Methods Evaluation.

Background: Parents of preschool-aged children are a key focus for interventions to shape healthy lifestyle behaviors and support risk reduction for obesity from an early age. In light of limited existing evidence on the use of mobile technology to promote healthy lifestyle behaviors among young children, we sought to gather parental priorities regarding a mobile app focused on guided goal setting across the domains of diet, physical activity, media use, and sleep.

Objective: The purpose of this study was to explore the priorities and needs of parents of 2- to 5-year-old children to guide developing the content and features of a mobile app aimed at promoting healthy lifestyle behaviors using a novel convergent mixed methods approach.

Methods: From November to December 2021, we invited parents or guardians in Kentucky to complete a series of web-based concept mapping activities and semistructured interviews (total N=30). Using 2 lists of items focused on (1) parental priorities (content areas) and (2) application features, we asked participants to conduct concept mapping procedures for each list: a web-based sorting activity, where participants grouped items together into thematic piles that made sense to them, and a rating activity, where participants rated each item on a 5-point Likert-type scale. The qualitative interviews were transcribed verbatim, coded, and then analyzed by constant comparative analysis to identify themes. We used the quantitative findings from the concept mapping process to triangulate the resulting themes from the qualitative interviews and generate possible app content areas and features.

Results: The concept mapping results resulted in two 3-cluster concept maps. For parental priorities, participants identified the clusters Creating Healthy Eating Habits, Forming Boundaries, and Building Good Relationships; for app features, participant clusters included Eating Healthy, Using the App, and Setting Goals. The interview themes also represented those 2 domains. Overall, the participants indicated that the top priorities were general health and wellbeing, routine and setting boundaries, and food and healthy eating when it comes to building healthy behaviors among their preschool-aged children. Parents indicated that quick, easy, and child-friendly recipes, goal tracking, and the use of tips and notifications were the features they valued most.

Conclusions: This study contributes to the understanding of what parents or caregivers of young children want from mobile apps, in both content and features, to support building healthy behaviors and routines. The findings can inform future research on the development and evaluation of existing or new mobile apps. Specific app features identified to meet family needs should be designed closely with a diverse set of families and tested using rigorous designs to identify the mechanisms of action that mobile apps may use for efficacious healthy parenting outcomes.

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来源期刊
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
5.40%
发文量
62
审稿时长
12 weeks
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