Usability testing of an online self-management program for Adolescents with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis

Jennifer Stinson, Patrick McGrath, Ellen Hodnett, Brian Feldman, Ciaran Duffy, Adam Huber, Lori Tucker, Ross Hetherington, Shirley Tse, Lynn Spiegel, Sarah Campillo, Navreet Gill, Meghan White

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

107 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: A new bilingual (English and French) Internet-basedself- management program, Teens Taking Charge: Managing Arthritis Online, for adolescents with arthritis and their parents was developed following a needs assessment.Objectives: This study explored the usability (user performance and satisfaction) of the self-management program for youth with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) and their parents to refine the health portal prototype.Methods: A qualitative study design with semi-structured, audio taped interviews and observation by a trained observer was undertaken with two iterative cyclesto determine the usability (ease of use, efficiency, errors, and user satisfaction) of the user interface and content areas of the intervention. A purposive sample of English-speaking (n = 11; mean age = 15.4, standard deviation [SD] 1.7) and French-speaking (n = 8; mean age = 16.0, SD 1.2) adolescents with JIA and one of their respectiveparents/caregivers were recruited from 2 Canadian tertiary care centers. Descriptive statistics and simple content analyses were used toorganize data into categories that reflected the emerging usability themes.Results: All of the participants had access to a computer/Internet at home; however, adolescents were more comfortable using the computer/Internet than their parents. Adolescents and parents provided similar as well as differing suggestions on how the website user interface could be improved in terms of its usability (navigation; presentation and control usage errors; format and layout; as well as areas for further content development). There were no major differences in usability issues between Englishand French-speaking participants. Minor changes to the website user interface were made and tested in a second cycle of participants.No further usability problems were identified in the second iterative cycle of testing. Teens and parents responded positively to the appearance and theme of the website (ie, promoting self-management) and felt that it was easy to navigate, use, and understand.Participants felt that the content was appropriate and geared to meet the unique needs of adolescents with JIA and their parents as well as English- and French-speaking families. Many participants responded that the interactive features (discussion board,stories of hope, and video clips of youth with JIA) made them feel supported and "not alone" in their illness.Conclusions: We describe the usability testing of a self-management health portal designed for English- and French-speaking youth with arthritis and theirparents, which uncovered several usability issues. Usability testingis a crucial step in the development of self-management health portals to ensure that the various end users (youth and parents) have theability to access, understand,and use health-related information andservices that are delivered via the Internet and that they are delivered in an efficient,effective, satisfying, and culturally competentmanner.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e30
JournalJournal of Medical Internet Research
Volume12
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Health Informatics

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

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