Development of the Digital Assessment of Precise Physical Activity (DAPPA) Tool for Older Adults
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Planning Phase
2.1.1. Reviewing the Literature
- Common problematic features or characteristics of existing self-report PA measures;
- Any issues specific to PA measurement in older adults;
- The meaning and importance of PA to older adults; and
- Older adults’ use and understanding of language and terminology relating to PA.
2.1.2. Focus Group and Qualitative Interviews
- What PA means to older adults and how they think and talk about it;
- Their experiences of measuring their own PA;
- What their perceptions are about the role of technology in PA; and
- What types of activity they choose to engage in and why.
2.1.3. Expert Survey
- What they deemed to be important aspects of PA for older adults;
- Their perceptions of common barriers to older adults’ PA;
- Any issues they experienced with commonly used self-report measures; and
- Perspectives on optimum measurement of older adults’ PA.
2.2. Optimisation Phase
2.2.1. Think-Aloud Interviews
2.2.2. Usability Study
- To investigate the user facing and technical functionality of the DAPPA tool when used in a real-world context;
- To evaluate the acceptability of the DAPPA tool to users and identify further improvements; and, if the data permitted,
- Explore the preliminary validity of DAPPA and compare its assessment with existing device based and self-report measures.
3. Results
3.1. Planning Phase
3.1.1. Reviewing the Literature
3.1.2. Focus Group and Qualitative Interviews
3.1.3. Expert Survey
3.2. Guiding Principles
3.3. The DAPPA Tool
‘Any amount of physical activity has benefits even if it’s only a few minutes here and there or lighter levels of activity. Being physically active is one of the best ways to make sure you can keep doing the things you enjoy, stay healthy and strong, and feel good. To get the most benefit, it is recommended that adults do at least 150 min of moderate activity a week. If higher levels of activity are a bit too much at the moment, doing light activity is still great. Light activities help to break up the amount of time you spend sitting or lying, and can help build you up to more energetic activities when you’re ready, so keep going with those activities!’
3.4. Optimisation Phase
3.4.1. Think Aloud Interviews
3.4.2. Usability Study
Evaluation Interviews
“…there were other things, like cooking I suppose… I didn’t class as an active- you know, sort of general household stuff, bit of gardening I overlooked until I caught up with that, but I think if I’d actually had the list of possible activities in front of me before I started, I would have been better prepared.”(DPA004)
“I couldn’t remember what I’d done five or six days ago exactly. I knew if I’d been to the shops, but not what I’d done in general... I felt I couldn’t be accurate enough.”(DPA002)
“getting your score for that day, so you can see the difference between the days, maybe you do some regular exercise or travel somewhere, or do something, you’d see the difference between those days, and days where you’re sort of sat around watching telly or reading the paper.”(DPA001)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | Planning Phase Participants (n = 15) |
---|---|
Gender | |
Female | 8 (53%) |
Male | 7 (47%) |
Age (mean (SD) range) | 74.3 (5.0) 68–83 |
65–74.9 | 8 (53%) |
75+ | 7 (47%) |
Marital Status | |
Married/cohabiting | 9 (60%) |
Divorced/single/widowed | 6 (40%) |
Education | |
Secondary or less | 5 (33%) |
Further education | 5 (33%) |
Higher education | 5 (33%) |
Employment | |
Retired | 14 (93%) |
Part time employment | - |
Unpaid volunteer | 1 (7%) |
Key Findings | Participant Quotes |
---|---|
Physical Activity (PA) seen as ‘movement’; inclusive of day-to-day activity; involves exertion | “Yes, I think it’s about mobility, moving. I don’t think it’s particularly sports. It’s your activity that you do in your everyday life.” (Focus Group, Female participant) |
“Increased heartrate. Possibly sporting activities or even domestic, doing the gardening. Anything that gets you moving” (Focus Group, Male participant) | |
“Movement and energy. It covers a whole range of things from day-to-day tasks of daily living to, at the other end, extreme sports, or anything in between such as walking, cycling. A whole range of stuff.” (P006, female, 76) | |
Variation in how existing common terminology interpreted; items not seen to capture one’s activity especially well | “Yeah, I’d describe it as slow walking or wandering rather than walking leisurely. Why not that? This is stationary but why not? Interesting. Why are they—just interested in why they separated it.” (P002, female, 69) |
“I just don’t feel that it captures… My problem is that I’m not a black and white person. […] I’ve got lots of fuzzy edges and the fuzzy edges don’t fit in with this and therefore you’re not going to capture a true story of people’s physical activity unless you look at the fuzzy edges.” (Focus Group, Female participant). | |
Majority familiar/ comfortable with computer/ tablet/ smartphone, but lack of interest and/or confidence in wearable technology—often thought of as more ‘for others’, but some recognition of utility in terms of motivation | “I’ve got friends that use [an activity monitor] and they use them religiously for about three months and never use them again. For me, what I saw of them is that you come quite manic about keep looking at their watch or whatever it is they were wearing, to see how many they’d done, and in the end they’d stand on the step on the spot and do steps, which is fine because they still use up the energy but I think either you walk or you don’t walk and knowing how far you’ve walked doesn’t really make much difference so for me personally, no, I wouldn’t bother with that.” (P001, female, 72) |
“Well, having an app that or a device that tells you how much activity you’ve undertaken is useful. I’ve got the Tom Tom watch that does the 10,000—well, it counts your steps. I appreciate they’re not that accurate but it’s a guide to how physically active you’ve been […] Yes, if I haven’t done many steps I think I should have done a bit more exercise today.” (P003, male, 68) | |
Common motivations and determinants (barriers and facilitators) of activity | “The hardest thing is to get people motivated and that’s for all of us in this room. We’ve all motivated ourselves somehow ‘cause we want to either live a bit longer, be a bit fitter and do things a lot longer than maybe our contemporaries.” (Focus Group, Male participant) |
“I used to love walking but I have got a lung condition and it limits me. I get very annoyed about it. I don’t think about it all the time but I’m quite a quick person and it’s when I try to do things too quickly I’m pulled back. Really I did play golf but I had to pack that up. I had to pack it up. I stick to the swimming now as the only thing I really do.” (P005, female, 71) | |
“I’m very, very organised so I think to be honest I don’t think there’s anything that makes it difficult, maybe because I love it as well, I love the actual feeling of being out there on my bike. When I’m on the indoor bike I have a news stand in front with a book so I can read at the same time.” (P002, female, 69) |
Design Objective | Features |
---|---|
To minimise cognitive demand (e.g., recall, interpretation, clarity of instruction, ease of use) |
|
To present activity options in a meaningful, easy-to-interpret way |
|
To allow easy reporting of wide range of activities across all dimensions important to older adults’ PA |
|
To increase older adults awareness/knowledge of their own PA |
|
Characteristic | Optimisation Phase (n = 29) | |
---|---|---|
Think Aloud (n = 10 a) | Usability Study (n = 19) | |
Gender | ||
Female | 4 (40%) | 10 (53%) |
Male | 6 (60%) | |
Age (mean (SD) range) | 74.2 (5.4) 68–83 | 73.7 (5.5) 66–90 |
65-74.9 | 5 (50%) | 10 (53%) |
75+ | 5 (50%) | 9 (47%) |
Marital Status | ||
Married/cohabiting | 7 (70%) | 14 (74%) |
Divorced/single/widowed | 3 (30%) | 5 (26%) |
Education | ||
Secondary or less | 3 (30%) | 9 (47%) |
Further education | 4 (40%) | - |
Higher education | 3 (30%) | 10 (53%) |
Employment | ||
Retired | 10 (100%) | 17 (89%) |
Part time employment | - | 2 (11%) |
Unpaid volunteer | - | - |
Section/Aspect of Tool | Summary of Issue Identified | Example | Change Implemented |
---|---|---|---|
Activity choices and selection | Some users mentioned looking for very specific examples of activities to report that they could not find. | “… it was mainly [going to] the doctor and the hospital because I have to go backwards and forwards several times there and, of course, you have to walk to the bus stop and then get on the bus and do that and that wasn’t covered. There was leisurely walking, but I consider leisurely walking going out for a leisurely walk, not your everyday things you have to do that you have to walk to.” (P001,female, 72) | Rather than add lots of additional separate activities that could become excessive to look through, such specific activities were added as examples in the relevant activity—e.g., within ‘Out and about’ section (activities outside the house that often include getting to and from places), we added walking to appointments as one of the examples in the ‘walking’ activity. |
Users sometimes missed reporting an activity/chose an alternative/related activity before later finding the appropriate one. | “No. Oh, I forgot about yoga. I do that most days but for about 10 min. Does that count as well? Right, okay. That’s interesting. Perhaps a reminder that people have to go right to the bottom because I didn’t go right to the bottom, and I do yoga every day. 10 min in the morning and 10 min in the evening. So, really, I’ve missed that out. Perhaps just a reminder. Go right to the bottom of the sheet.” (P002, female, 69) | Added brief text before the first page of the activity diary to encourage people to look through all categories of activities first before starting to report their activity to avoid missing out activities or choosing a less accurate alternative | |
Duration/timing of activity | Tool doesn’t allow user to indicate if an activity spanned multiple time periods—for example—late morning/early afternoon | “Yeah, ‘cause we were doing it in the morning and the afternoon, but not in the evening, and then I don’t seem to have an option to do morning and afternoon.” (P003, male, 68) | Modified reporting functionality so that users can tick all that apply from ‘Morning’, Afternoon’ and ‘Evening’ options. |
Recalling activity | Several remarked that having their diary or calendar to hand would be useful in recalling what they did on specific days | “It might have been quite a good idea if I’d known I was gonna be thinking back for the week so that I had my […]. If I was going to do this then I would probably spend time thinking, oh yeah, and look at the calendar and think, oh, I did that, oh yeah, I did that. Because, as you get older you don’t remember.” (P009, female, 70) | Added a notice on the instructions page to recommend that users have a diary to hand if they use one, as it may aid recall of activities from preceding week. |
Clarity of instruction | Users sometimes lost track of what day they were entering activity for | “Just for Thursday? (Interviewer: Yes). I thought it was for the whole seven days.” (P007, female, 83) “Yeah, perhaps that needs—does it actually state it and I’ve missed it? ‘Cause it had Thursday 11 July. Perhaps put Thursday 11 July on there—you know, the date on there as well.” (P002, female, 69) | Enhanced the ‘day/date/X days ago’ title at the top of each page to make this more prominent and also fixed this header so that it is visible regardless of how far down a page people scroll as a reminder. |
Some users were not aware that they could move between days during completion | “Ah the next day, can you go backwards? I jumped to the next day.” (P012, male, 77) “Oh I just remembered what I was doing last Thursday, I was coming back from France. Can we go back? Can I go back and change it?” (P011, male, 76) | Added detail about function of the back button by adding sentence next to it explaining that participants can return to previous days to amend or add to what they have already reported. |
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Essery, R.; Denison-Day, J.; Grey, E.; Priestley, E.; Bradbury, K.; Mutrie, N.; Western, M.J. Development of the Digital Assessment of Precise Physical Activity (DAPPA) Tool for Older Adults. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 7949. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17217949
Essery R, Denison-Day J, Grey E, Priestley E, Bradbury K, Mutrie N, Western MJ. Development of the Digital Assessment of Precise Physical Activity (DAPPA) Tool for Older Adults. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(21):7949. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17217949
Chicago/Turabian StyleEssery, Rosie, James Denison-Day, Elisabeth Grey, Emma Priestley, Katherine Bradbury, Nanette Mutrie, and Max J. Western. 2020. "Development of the Digital Assessment of Precise Physical Activity (DAPPA) Tool for Older Adults" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 21: 7949. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17217949
APA StyleEssery, R., Denison-Day, J., Grey, E., Priestley, E., Bradbury, K., Mutrie, N., & Western, M. J. (2020). Development of the Digital Assessment of Precise Physical Activity (DAPPA) Tool for Older Adults. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(21), 7949. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17217949