3.8 Article

Integrating User-Centered Design and Behavioral Science to Design a Mobile Intervention for Obesity and Binge Eating: Mixed Methods Analysis

期刊

JMIR FORMATIVE RESEARCH
卷 5, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/23809

关键词

obesity; binge eating; user-centered design; mobile intervention; engagement; experimental therapeutics

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [K01 DK116925, P50 MH115837]

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This study aimed to inform the design of a new mobile intervention for obesity and binge eating by incorporating user-centered design and basic behavioral science. Participants engaged in a prototyping design activity over one week, with most finding the selected strategy helpful and intending to continue use, despite facing challenges in implementation.
Background: Accounting for how end users engage with technologies is imperative for designing an efficacious mobile behavioral intervention. Objective: This mixed methods analysis examined the translational potential of user-centered design and basic behavioral science to inform the design of a new mobile intervention for obesity and binge eating. Methods: A total of 22 adults (7/22, 32% non-Hispanic White; 8/22, 36% male) with self-reported obesity and recurrent binge eating (>= 12 episodes in 3 months) who were interested in losing weight and reducing binge eating completed a prototyping design activity over 1 week. Leveraging evidence from behavioral economics on choice architecture, participants chose treatment strategies from 20 options (aligned with treatment targets composing a theoretical model of the relation between binge eating and weight) to demonstrate which strategies and treatment targets are relevant to end users. The process by which participants selected and implemented strategies and their change in outcomes were analyzed. Results: Although prompted to select one strategy, participants selected between 1 and 3 strategies, citing perceived achievability, helpfulness, or relevance as selection reasons. Over the week, all practiced a strategy at least once; 82% (18/22) struggled with implementation, and 23% (5/22) added a new strategy. Several themes emerged on successes and challenges with implementation, yielding design implications for supporting users in behavior change. In postexperiment reflections, 82% (18/22) indicated the strategy was helpful, and 86% (19/22) planned to continue use. One-week average within-subject changes in weight (-2.2 [SD -5.0] pounds) and binge eating (-1.6 [SD -1.8] episodes) indicated small clinical improvement. Conclusions: Applying user-centered design and basic behavioral science yielded design insights to incorporate personalization through user choice with guidance, which may enhance engagement with and potential efficacy of digital health interventions.

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