Patients’ perspectives about the design of a mobile application for psychotic disorders
Author(s) -
Raquel Simões de Almeida,
Tiago J. C. Sousa,
António Marques,
Cristina Queirós
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
psychology community and health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2182-438X
DOI - 10.5964/pch.v7i1.192
Subject(s) - mental illness , mobile apps , mental health , participatory design , download , psychology , smartphone app , population , citizen journalism , sample (material) , medicine , psychiatry , internet privacy , clinical psychology , computer science , world wide web , engineering , chromatography , mechanical engineering , chemistry , parallels , environmental health
Aim: Based on the design of applications for psychotic disorders illness self-management, this study aimed to understand patients’ patterns of technology usage, as well as their expectations and requirements concerning the design of an app for rehabilitation and illness management purposes. It also aimed to identify guidelines for mobile application development for this population. Method: After a literature review, a questionnaire was developed, focused on behaviours and opinions about technology usage. It was applied, through a cross-sectional study, to a sample of 102 users of mental health services with psychotic disorders (62% men; with ages between 22 and 66 years old). Results: Nearly 59% of the participants were willing to download an app for illness self-management, and 51% evaluated as essential the self-management of their mental health condition. However, correlation analysis revealed that the more years with mental illness, the less importance is given to an app for this purpose. Conclusion: The use of mobile technologies seems to the have potential to empower individuals with mental health problems, especially younger ones and those in early disease stages. Concerns about privacy/security should be considered, as well as simple screening designs and texts. The results also reveal the importance of user participatory design.
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