A personalized mobile app for physical activity: An experimental mixed-methods study

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Abstract

Objectives: To investigate the feasibility of the be.well app and its personalization approach which regularly considers users’ preferences, amongst university students. Methods: We conducted a mixed-methods, pre-post experiment, where participants used the app for 2 months. Eligibility criteria included: age 18–34 years; owning an iPhone with Internet access; and fluency in English. Usability was assessed by a validated questionnaire; engagement metrics were reported. Changes in physical activity were assessed by comparing the difference in daily step count between baseline and 2 months. Interviews were conducted to assess acceptability; thematic analysis was conducted. Results: Twenty-three participants were enrolled in the study (mean age = 21.9 years, 71.4% women). The mean usability score was 5.6 ± 0.8 out of 7. The median daily engagement time was 2 minutes. Eighteen out of 23 participants used the app in the last month of the study. Qualitative data revealed that people liked the personalized activity suggestion feature as it was actionable and promoted user autonomy. Some users also expressed privacy concerns if they had to provide a lot of personal data to receive highly personalized features. Daily step count increased after 2 months of the intervention (median difference = 1953 steps/day, p-value

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Tong, H. L., Quiroz, J. C., Kocaballi, A. B., Ijaz, K., Coiera, E., Chow, C. K., & Laranjo, L. (2022). A personalized mobile app for physical activity: An experimental mixed-methods study. Digital Health, 8. https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076221115017

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