Persuasive Design Techniques and App Design Recommendations to Improve Health Workforce Capability in Rural Health Professionals: What Do Users Want and How Does an App Help?

behavior change capability career dialog support digital health employment health health application health professional health workforce mHealth mobile apps mobile health persuasive strategies review rural social support task support user experience wellness workforce planning

Journal

JMIR human factors
ISSN: 2292-9495
Titre abrégé: JMIR Hum Factors
Pays: Canada
ID NLM: 101666561

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
02 May 2022
Historique:
received: 20 11 2021
accepted: 28 12 2021
revised: 11 12 2021
entrez: 2 5 2022
pubmed: 3 5 2022
medline: 3 5 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Health professionals' perceptions of persuasive design techniques for use in technological solutions to improve health workforce capability have not been previously explored. This study aims to explore rural health professionals' perceptions of health workforce capability and persuasive design techniques; and translate these into recommendations for designing a health workforce capability app to increase their impact and usefulness. Qualitative interviews with 13 rural health professionals were conducted. Subsequently, 32 persuasive techniques were used as a framework to deductively analyze the data. Persuasive design technique domains were Primary Task Support, Dialog Support, System Credibility Support, Social Support, and Cialdini's Principles of Persuasion. Persuasive design techniques can be applied across the factors that influence health workforce capability including health and personal qualities; competencies and skills; values, attitudes, and motivation; and factors that operate outside of work and at the team, organizational, and labor market levels. The majority of the 32 persuasive design techniques were reflected in the data from the interviews and led to recommendations as to how these could be translated into practice, with the exception of scarcity. Many suggestions and persuasive design techniques link back to the need for tailored and localized solutions such as the need for country-specific-based evidence, the wish for localized communities of practice, learning from other rural health professionals, and referral pathways to other clinicians. Participants identified how persuasive design techniques can optimize the user experience to help meet rural health professionals needs for more efficient systems to improve patient access to care, quality care, and to enable working in interprofessional team-based care. Social inclusion plays a vital role for health professionals, indicating the importance of the Social Support domain of persuasive techniques. Overall, health professionals were open to self-monitoring of their work performance and some professionals used wearables to monitor their health. Rural health professionals' perceptions of health workforce capability informed which persuasive design techniques can be used to optimize the user experience of an app. These were translated into recommendations for designing a health workforce capability app to increase likelihood of adoption. This study has also contributed to the further validation of the Persuasive Systems Design model through empirically aligning elements of the model to increase persuasive system content and functionality with real-world applied data, in this case the health workforce capability of rural health professionals. Our findings confirm that these techniques can be used to develop a future prototype of an app that may assist health professionals in improving or maintaining their health workforce capability which in turn may increase recruitment and retention in rural areas. Health professionals need to be central during the design phase. Interventions are needed to provide a supportive environment to rural and remote health professionals to increase their rural health workforce capability.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Health professionals' perceptions of persuasive design techniques for use in technological solutions to improve health workforce capability have not been previously explored.
OBJECTIVE OBJECTIVE
This study aims to explore rural health professionals' perceptions of health workforce capability and persuasive design techniques; and translate these into recommendations for designing a health workforce capability app to increase their impact and usefulness.
METHODS METHODS
Qualitative interviews with 13 rural health professionals were conducted. Subsequently, 32 persuasive techniques were used as a framework to deductively analyze the data. Persuasive design technique domains were Primary Task Support, Dialog Support, System Credibility Support, Social Support, and Cialdini's Principles of Persuasion.
RESULTS RESULTS
Persuasive design techniques can be applied across the factors that influence health workforce capability including health and personal qualities; competencies and skills; values, attitudes, and motivation; and factors that operate outside of work and at the team, organizational, and labor market levels. The majority of the 32 persuasive design techniques were reflected in the data from the interviews and led to recommendations as to how these could be translated into practice, with the exception of scarcity. Many suggestions and persuasive design techniques link back to the need for tailored and localized solutions such as the need for country-specific-based evidence, the wish for localized communities of practice, learning from other rural health professionals, and referral pathways to other clinicians. Participants identified how persuasive design techniques can optimize the user experience to help meet rural health professionals needs for more efficient systems to improve patient access to care, quality care, and to enable working in interprofessional team-based care. Social inclusion plays a vital role for health professionals, indicating the importance of the Social Support domain of persuasive techniques. Overall, health professionals were open to self-monitoring of their work performance and some professionals used wearables to monitor their health.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Rural health professionals' perceptions of health workforce capability informed which persuasive design techniques can be used to optimize the user experience of an app. These were translated into recommendations for designing a health workforce capability app to increase likelihood of adoption. This study has also contributed to the further validation of the Persuasive Systems Design model through empirically aligning elements of the model to increase persuasive system content and functionality with real-world applied data, in this case the health workforce capability of rural health professionals. Our findings confirm that these techniques can be used to develop a future prototype of an app that may assist health professionals in improving or maintaining their health workforce capability which in turn may increase recruitment and retention in rural areas. Health professionals need to be central during the design phase. Interventions are needed to provide a supportive environment to rural and remote health professionals to increase their rural health workforce capability.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35499866
pii: v9i2e35094
doi: 10.2196/35094
pmc: PMC9112088
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

e35094

Informations de copyright

©Sabrina Pit, Robyn Ramsden, Aaron JH Tan, Kristy Payne, James Barr, Benjamin Eames, Mike Edwards, Richard Colbran. Originally published in JMIR Human Factors (https://humanfactors.jmir.org), 02.05.2022.

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Auteurs

Sabrina Pit (S)

New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Hamilton, Australia.
School of Medicine, Western Sydney University, Campbelltown, Australia.
University Centre for Rural Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Sydney, Lismore, Australia.

Robyn Ramsden (R)

New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Hamilton, Australia.

Aaron Jh Tan (AJ)

New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Hamilton, Australia.

Kristy Payne (K)

New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Hamilton, Australia.

James Barr (J)

New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Hamilton, Australia.

Benjamin Eames (B)

New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Hamilton, Australia.

Mike Edwards (M)

New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Hamilton, Australia.

Richard Colbran (R)

New South Wales Rural Doctors Network, Hamilton, Australia.

Classifications MeSH