Browsing by Author "Burls, Amanda"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemExploring the usability of a mobile app for adolescent obesity management.(2014-08-07) O'Malley, Grace; Dowdall, Grainne; Burls, Amanda; Perry, Ivan J; Curran, NoirinBACKGROUND Obesity is a global epidemic Behavioral change approaches towards improving nutrition increasing physical activity level improving sleep and reducing sitting time are recommended as best practices in adolescent obesity management However access to evidence based treatment is limited and portable technologies such as mobile apps may provide a useful platform to deliver such lifestyle interventions No evidence based validated app exists for obesity intervention therefore a novel mobile app Reactivate was developed for use in the Temple Street W82GO Healthy Lifestyles Program W82GO OBJECTIVE This study aimed to test the usability technical effectiveness efficiency and user satisfaction of the Reactivate mobile app in obese adolescents METHODS Ten adolescents 7 males and 3 females aged 12 17 years who had been treated for obesity 98th percentile for body mass index at the Temple Street Children s University Hospital were recruited Participants were given 8 tasks to complete in order to test the technical effectiveness of the app A research assistant timed the user while completing each task in order to test the relative user efficiency of the app time on task The tasks fell into 5 categories and required the user to enter personal settings find and answer surveys create a message use the goal setting feature and enter details regarding their weight and height In exploration of user satisfaction each participant completed the standardized software usability measurement inventory SUMI which measures 5 aspects of user satisfaction efficiency effect helpfulness controllability and learnability Descriptive statistics were used to explore the mean relative user efficiency and SUMI scores RESULTS Mean age was 14 26 SD 1 58 years All adolescents completed each of the tasks successfully The mean relative user efficiency scores were two to three times that of an expert user Users responded that they would use Reactivate to monitor their growth over time for motivation and for goal setting All users described Reactivate as an important mobile app CONCLUSIONS Our study describes the usability of a mobile app used in adolescent obesity management Adolescents found Reactivate easy to use and their SUMI results indicated that the app scored high on user satisfaction Usability testing is an important step towards refining the development of the Reactivate app which can be used in the treatment of obesity The study on the clinical efficacy of the Reactivate app is currently underway
- ItemA smartphone intervention for adolescent obesity: study protocol for a randomised controlled non-inferiority trial.(2014-02-28) O'Malley, Grace; Clarke, Mike; Burls, Amanda; Murphy, Sinéad; Murphy, Nuala; Perry, Ivan JBACKGROUND There are few evidence based mobile health solutions for treating adolescent obesity The primary aim of this parallel non inferiority trial is to assess the effectiveness of an experimental smartphone application in reducing obesity at 12 months compared to the Temple Street W82GO Healthy Lifestyles intervention METHODS DESIGN The primary outcome measure is change in body mass index standardised deviation score at 12 months The secondary aim is to compare the effect of treatment on secondary outcomes including waist circumference insulin sensitivity quality of life physical activity and psychosocial health Adolescents with a body mass index at or above the 98th percentile 12 to 17 years will be recruited from the Obesity clinic at Temple Street Children s University Hospital in Dublin Ireland W82GO is a family based lifestyle change intervention delivered in two phases over 12 months In the current study participants will be randomised for phase two of treatment to either usual care or care delivered via smartphone application One hundred and thirty four participants will be randomised between the two study arms An intention to treat analysis will be used to compare treatment differences between the groups at 12 months DISCUSSION The results of this study will be disseminated via open access publication and will provide important information for clinicians patients and policy makers regarding the use of mobile health interventions in the management of adolescent obesity TRIAL REGISTRATION Clinicaltrials gov NCT01804855