Abstract
We present results from a qualitative study involving eight intergenerational families (27 participants) to understand how a family tracking intervention can help support care among intergenerational family members. Our findings show that family members communicate and stay aware of each other's' health through shared fitness data and conversations triggered by fitness sharing. We identified different challenges and preferences among the three age groups in our study: older adults enjoyed family fitness sharing but often encountered various technical challenges, the middle-aged group served as a key person to care for the rest of the family members, and the young generation could not fully engage in fitness sharing due to their busy schedule and privacy concerns. These findings suggest the design of family fitness sharing to account for the age differences in intergenerational families and support the unique needs of family fitness sharing.
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Li, Q., Caldeira, C., Epstein, D. A., & Chen, Y. (2020). Supporting caring among intergenerational family members through family fitness tracking. In ACM International Conference Proceeding Series (pp. 1–10). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3421937.3422018
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