Adherence, acceptability, and usability of a smartphone app to promote physical exercise in patients with peripheral arterial disease and intermittent claudication.

Rafaela Oliveira, Susana Pedras, Carlos Veiga, Luís Moreira, Daniel Santarém, Daniel Guedes, Hugo Paredes, Ivone Silva
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Abstract

This study presents the development and assessment of a mobile application - the WalkingPAD app - aimed at promoting adherence to physical exercise among patients with Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD). The assessment of adherence, acceptability, and usability was performed using mixed methods. Thirty-eight patients participated in the study with a mean age of 63.4 years (SD = 6.8). Thirty patients used the application for three months, responded to a semi-structured interview, and completed a task test and the System Usability Scale (SUS, ranging from 0 to 100). The application's adherence rate was 73%. When patients were asked about their reasons for using the app, the main themes that emerged were motivation, self-monitoring, and support in fulfilling a commitment. The average SUS score was 82.82 (SD = 18.4), indicating high usability. An upcoming version of the WalkingPAD app is expected to redesign both tasks - opening the app and looking up the walking history - which were rated as the most difficult tasks to accomplish. The new version of the WalkingPAD app will incorporate participants' comments and suggestions to enhance usability for this population.

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Adherence, acceptability, and usability of a smartphone app to promote physical exercise in patients with peripheral arterial disease and intermittent claudication. Usability testing of a palliative care information resource - outcomes from the formative evaluation of the CarerHelp Toolkit prototype. User-centred design of a patient portal for persons living with home mechanical ventilation and long-term tracheostomy: a mixed methods study. Validation of the eHealth literacy scales: comparison between the shorter and longer versions. Identifying biological markers and sociodemographic factors that influence the gap between phenotypic and chronological ages.
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