A User Typology for Digital Health Self-Management Technologies: A Qualitative Study of the Long-term User Experiences of Older Adults with a Digital Self-Management Platform for Multimorbidity (ProACT).
Citation:
Polak, S., Sillevis Smitt, M., Jacobs, A., van Leeuwen, C., Doyle, J., Cullen-Smith, S., Dinsmore J., A User Typology for Digital Health Self-Management Technologies: A Qualitative Study of the Long-term User Experiences of Older Adults with a Digital Self-Management Platform for Multimorbidity (ProACT)., Journal of Healthcare Informatics Research, 2025Download Item:
Abstract:
Self-management technology to track symptoms, medication, activity and other
health goals is being proposed as a solution to the increasing prevalence of multi-
morbidity in our ageing populations. Yet, no one-size-fits-all exists for digital self-
management. To assure that self-management technologies can provide valuable
support in the health management of older people with multimorbidity (PwMs),
this paper investigates how and why older PwMs differ in their reaction to the use
of self-management technology. An inductive thematic analysis was performed on
interviews of 42 PwMs (34 M; 8 F) of 65 years and older in Belgium to explore their
emotional and behavioural reaction to the long-term (mean duration = 9 months)
use of a digital self-management platform. The analysis resulted in six main themes
describing the user experience of older PwMs: emotional reaction to self-monitoring of health, behavioural reaction to self-monitoring of health, involvement from
PwMs’ social network in self-monitoring of health, PwMs’ health literacy, PwMs’
self-efficacy in health management, and PwMs’ technology acceptance for self-management. Based on distinctive differences in these themes and the analytical lens of
the Causality Orientations Theory, four user types were distinguished: the Indepen-
dently Empowered, the Socially Activated, the “Not for me”, and the Ruminator. By
exploring these different user types and their needs regarding digital self-management, we have provided a first step for researchers and health practitioners towards
enhanced personalised support that enables the optimal self-management journey of
older adults with multimorbidity.
Sponsor
Grant Number
European Commission
945449
European Commission
68996
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/dinsmorjDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Dinsmore, John
Sponsor:
European CommissionEuropean Commission
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Journal of Healthcare Informatics Research;Availability:
Full text availableSubject:
User Typology, Digital Health, Self-Management, Multimorbidity, Older Adults, User ExperienceSubject (TCD):
Ageing , Digital Health , Health Psychology , OLDER PEOPLEDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1007/s41666-024-00183-4Metadata
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