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Development of MyREADY Transition BBD Mobile App, a Health Intervention Technology Platform, to Improve Care Transition for Youth With Brain-Based Disabilities: User-Centered Design Approach (Preprint)

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Transition from pediatric to adult health care varies and is resource intensive. Patient-centered health information technology (HIT) interventions are increasingly being developed in partnership with patients.

OBJECTIVE

This study aims to develop an internet-based mobile app intervention for patients with brain-based disabilities to improve transition in care readiness.

METHODS

The app was designed for patients aged 15 to 17 years with brain-based disabilities having the ability to use a mobile app. A multidisciplinary team, an industry partner, and a patient and family advisory council was assembled. We hypothesized that existing tools could be migrated into the app to address education, empowerment, and navigation. We used cognitive learning theory to support chapters targeting transition in care skill sets. We used the agile iterative methodology to engage stakeholders.

RESULTS

We developed a novel MyREADY Transition HIT platform. An electronic mentor supported cognitive learning with messaging, quizzes, rewards, and videos. We used gaming to guide navigation through a fictitious health care city. Adapting existing tools was achieved by the patient and family advisory council requesting personalization. Our iterative design required time-consuming back-end technology management. Developing the platform took 24 months instead of our grant-approved 12 months, impacting the onset of the planned trial within the allotted budget.

CONCLUSIONS

A novel patient-centered HIT platform to improve health care transition was successfully developed in partnership with patients and industry. Careful resource management was needed to achieve timely delivery of the end product, flagging the cautious planning required to deliver HIT tools in time for the much-needed trials informing their clinical application.

CLINICALTRIAL

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03852550; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03852550

Authors

Marelli A; Rozenblum R; Bolster-Foucault C; Via-Dufresne Ley A; Maynard N; Amaria K; Galuppi B; Strohm S; Nguyen L; Dawe-McCord C

Publication date

September 5, 2023

DOI

10.2196/preprints.51606

Preprint server

JMIR Preprints
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