Exploring the Black Box of an mHealth Intervention (LIFE4YOUth): A Qualitative Process and Outcome Evaluation of End-User Engagement
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. The LIFE4YOUth Intervention
2.3. Settings and Recruitment Process
2.4. Informants and Data Collection
2.5. Ethical Approval
2.6. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. How the Intervention Was Understood, Interpreted, and Applied
3.1.1. Literal
3.1.2. Vague
3.1.3. Rigid
3.1.4. Creative
3.2. Interaction Outcomes Based on Social Cognitive Theory
3.2.1. Knowledge
3.2.2. Outcome Expectation
3.2.3. Self-Efficacy
3.2.4. Perceived Facilitators
3.2.5. Goals
4. Discussion
4.1. Result Discussion
4.1.1. Main Findings
4.1.2. Implications for Practice
4.1.3. Implications for Theory
4.2. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Intervention Components | Design Characteristics | BCT 1 | Physical Activity | Diet | Alcohol | Smoking |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Weekly screening tool to prompt recording of health behaviors | Examples, predefined choices | Self-monitoring of behavior | x | x | x | x |
Feedback on performance on behaviors | Colored feedback (green, yellow, red) | Feedback on behavior | x | x | x | x |
Information to increase awareness of consequences of health behaviors | Text and pictures | Information about health consequences | x | x | x | x |
Template to highlight consequences of behaviors | Predefined choices, examples, textual feedback | Information about social and environmental consequences | x | x | x | |
Prompting and identifying motives for health behavior change | Predefined choices | Incompatible beliefs | x | x | x | x |
Practical tips to increase confidence in behavior change | Text | Instruction on how to perform a behavior | x | x | x | x |
Instructions to define goals | Checklist, examples, free text boxes | Goal setting (behavior) | x | x | ||
Template to reflect on obstacles to behavior change | Examples, predefined choices, free text boxes | Problem solving Action planning | x | x | x | x |
Variable | n (n = 16) |
---|---|
Sex | |
Female | 9 |
Male | 7 |
Age, mean (range) | 17.5 (16–19) |
Educational profile | |
Theoretical | 12 |
Vocational | 4 |
Satisfaction with life 1 (0–10) | |
7–10 | 13 |
4–6 | 3 |
0–3 | 0 |
Prior experiences of using mHealth | |
None | 0 |
Little | 14 |
Considerable | 2 |
Prior experiences of attempts to improve | |
Physical activity | 13 |
Food habits | 12 |
Smoking cigarettes | 0 |
Alcohol consumption | 1 |
None | 1 |
Health education in school | |
Recently | 10 |
Not recently | 6 |
LIFE4YOUth health behavior module engagement | |
Physical activity | 4 |
Food habits | 9 |
Alcohol consumption | 3 |
Smoking cigarettes | 0 |
Theme | Categories | Example of High and Low Degree |
---|---|---|
Deliberate | Defining | “Well, let’s see, last week…yeah, I don’t know, maybe… I mean, I guess that we talk about alcohol here, right? Not just water and things like that.” (illustrates reflection about core concepts (standard units)) “Then it was…When thinking about soda, it was four, otherwise I only drink water.” (responded to a question in the weekly screening without realizing that the question referred to alcohol) |
Considering | “I usually don’t eat as much fruits as I did before, but I usually drink a lot of smoothies, though.” (How many 100 g portions (Equivalent to an average sized banana or one large apple) of fruit did you consume last week?) “I ate two bananas yesterday, so… I seldom eat apples.” | |
Flexible | Centralizing | “… I’m not sure about what’s considered a [Swedish fika]. Well, I am thinking about sweet stuff. But I use to buy sandwiches and so on in the café because I usually work out and must energize myself.” “I’m choosing one because…well, one can per week, that sounds normal.” |
Personalizing | “Yeah, which habit do I want to change? To sleep better, I mean, to get more sleep. It doesn’t have to be something related to exercise, right? It can be like sleep too?” “I…. right now, I’ve always eaten breakfast every day because I think it’s very important. […]. So, I maybe don’t have to put a goal on that, […] but maybe I should eat a bit more then, that could be a specific goal” (after reading about goal definition based on an example about having breakfast) |
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Seiterö, A.; Thomas, K.; Löf, M.; Müssener, U. Exploring the Black Box of an mHealth Intervention (LIFE4YOUth): A Qualitative Process and Outcome Evaluation of End-User Engagement. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 14022. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114022
Seiterö A, Thomas K, Löf M, Müssener U. Exploring the Black Box of an mHealth Intervention (LIFE4YOUth): A Qualitative Process and Outcome Evaluation of End-User Engagement. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(21):14022. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114022
Chicago/Turabian StyleSeiterö, Anna, Kristin Thomas, Marie Löf, and Ulrika Müssener. 2022. "Exploring the Black Box of an mHealth Intervention (LIFE4YOUth): A Qualitative Process and Outcome Evaluation of End-User Engagement" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 21: 14022. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114022
APA StyleSeiterö, A., Thomas, K., Löf, M., & Müssener, U. (2022). Exploring the Black Box of an mHealth Intervention (LIFE4YOUth): A Qualitative Process and Outcome Evaluation of End-User Engagement. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(21), 14022. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114022