TY - JOUR
T1 - Design of a Tool Capable of Assessing Environmental Sociocultural Physical Factors Influencing Women's Decisions on When and Where to Toilet Within Real-World Settings
T2 - Protocol for the Build and Usability Testing of a Mobile App for Use by Community-Dwelling Women
AU - The Prevention of Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms (PLUS) Research Consortium2
AU - Miller, Janis M.
AU - Wyman, Jean F.
AU - An, Lawrence
AU - Chu, Haitao
AU - Fok, Cynthia S.
AU - Lavender, Missy
AU - Lewis, Cora Elizabeth
AU - Markland, Alayne D.
AU - Rickey, Leslie M.
AU - Sheng, Ying
AU - Sutcliffe, Siobhan
AU - Low, Lisa Kane
AU - Mueller, Elizabeth R.
AU - Brubaker, Linda
AU - Acevedo-Alvarez, Marian
AU - Fitzgerald, Colleen M.
AU - Hardacker, Cecilia T.
AU - Hebert-Beirne, Jeni
AU - Shoham, David A.
AU - Kenton, Kimberly Sue
AU - Griffith, James W.
AU - Simon, Melissa
AU - Burgio, Kathryn L.
AU - Coyne-Beasley, Tamera
AU - Lewis, Cora E.
AU - McGwin, Gerald
AU - Vaughan, Camille P.
AU - Williams, Beverly Rosa
AU - Gahagan, Sheila
AU - Lacoursiere, D. Yvette
AU - Nodora, Jesse
AU - An, Lawrence Chin I.
AU - Brady, Sonya S.
AU - Constantine, Melissa L.
AU - Rockwood, Todd
AU - Scal, Peter
AU - Newman, Diane K.
AU - Smith, Ariana L.
AU - Berry, Amanda
AU - Epperson, C. Neill
AU - Klusaritz, Heather
AU - Schmitz, Kathryn H.
AU - Stapleton, Ann E.
AU - James, Aimee S.
AU - Lowder, Jerry L.
AU - Meister, Melanie R.
AU - Camenga, Deepa R.
AU - Cunningham, Shayna D.
AU - Barthold, Julia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 JMIR Publications Inc.. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Background: Although surveys and apps are available for women to report urination and bladder symptoms, they do not include their decisions regarding toileting. Real-world factors can interfere with toileting decisions, which may then influence bladder health. This premise lacks data per want of a robust data collection tool. Objective: The Prevention of Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms (PLUS) research consortium engaged a transdisciplinary team to build and test WhereIGo, a mobile data collection app for Android and iOS. The design goal was a comprehensive reporting system for capturing environmental, sociocultural, and physical factors that influence women's decisions for toileting. Aims include having (1) an innovative feature for reporting physiologic urge sensation when "thinking about my bladder" and shortly before "I just peed," (2) real-time reporting along with short look-back opportunities, and (3) ease of use anywhere. Methods: The development team included a plain language specialist, a usability specialist, creative designers, programming experts, and PLUS scientific content experts. Both real-time and ecological momentary assessments were used to comprehensively capture influences on toileting decisions including perceived access to toileting, degree of busyness or stress or focus, beverage intake amount, urge degree, or a leakage event. The restriction on the maximal number of taps for any screen was six. PLUS consortium investigators did pilot-testing. Formal usability testing relied on the recruitment of community-dwelling women at four PLUS research sites. Women used the app for 2 consecutive days. Outcome measures were the system usability scale (SUS; 0-100 range) and the functional Mobile Application Rating Scale (1-5 range). These scales were embedded at the end of the app. The estimated a priori sample size needed, considering the SUS cut point score set at ≥74, was 40 women completing the study. Results: Funding was provided by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases since July 2015. The integrity of the build process was documented through multiple 5-minute videos presented to PLUS Consortium and through WhereIGo screenshots of the final product. Participants included 44 women, with 41 (93%) completing data collection. Participants ranged in age from 21 to 85 years, were predominantly non-Hispanic White (n=25, 57%), college-educated (n=25, 57%), and with incomes below US $75,000 (n=27, 62%). The SUS score was 78.0 (SE 1.7), which was higher than 75% of the 500 products tested by the SUS developers. The mean functional Mobile Application Rating Scale score was 4.4 (SE 0.08). The build and informal acceptability testing were completed in 2019, enrollment for formal usability testing completed by June 2020, and analysis was completed in 2022. Conclusions: WhereIGo is a novel app with good usability for women to report toileting decisions, urination, and fluid intake. Future research using the app could test the influence of real-time factors on bladder health.
AB - Background: Although surveys and apps are available for women to report urination and bladder symptoms, they do not include their decisions regarding toileting. Real-world factors can interfere with toileting decisions, which may then influence bladder health. This premise lacks data per want of a robust data collection tool. Objective: The Prevention of Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms (PLUS) research consortium engaged a transdisciplinary team to build and test WhereIGo, a mobile data collection app for Android and iOS. The design goal was a comprehensive reporting system for capturing environmental, sociocultural, and physical factors that influence women's decisions for toileting. Aims include having (1) an innovative feature for reporting physiologic urge sensation when "thinking about my bladder" and shortly before "I just peed," (2) real-time reporting along with short look-back opportunities, and (3) ease of use anywhere. Methods: The development team included a plain language specialist, a usability specialist, creative designers, programming experts, and PLUS scientific content experts. Both real-time and ecological momentary assessments were used to comprehensively capture influences on toileting decisions including perceived access to toileting, degree of busyness or stress or focus, beverage intake amount, urge degree, or a leakage event. The restriction on the maximal number of taps for any screen was six. PLUS consortium investigators did pilot-testing. Formal usability testing relied on the recruitment of community-dwelling women at four PLUS research sites. Women used the app for 2 consecutive days. Outcome measures were the system usability scale (SUS; 0-100 range) and the functional Mobile Application Rating Scale (1-5 range). These scales were embedded at the end of the app. The estimated a priori sample size needed, considering the SUS cut point score set at ≥74, was 40 women completing the study. Results: Funding was provided by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases since July 2015. The integrity of the build process was documented through multiple 5-minute videos presented to PLUS Consortium and through WhereIGo screenshots of the final product. Participants included 44 women, with 41 (93%) completing data collection. Participants ranged in age from 21 to 85 years, were predominantly non-Hispanic White (n=25, 57%), college-educated (n=25, 57%), and with incomes below US $75,000 (n=27, 62%). The SUS score was 78.0 (SE 1.7), which was higher than 75% of the 500 products tested by the SUS developers. The mean functional Mobile Application Rating Scale score was 4.4 (SE 0.08). The build and informal acceptability testing were completed in 2019, enrollment for formal usability testing completed by June 2020, and analysis was completed in 2022. Conclusions: WhereIGo is a novel app with good usability for women to report toileting decisions, urination, and fluid intake. Future research using the app could test the influence of real-time factors on bladder health.
KW - ecological momentary assessment
KW - mobile app
KW - mobile phone
KW - population studies
KW - real-world environment
KW - time factors
KW - toileting
KW - urinary bladder
KW - woman's health
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85204921311&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2196/54046
DO - 10.2196/54046
M3 - Article
C2 - 39293052
AN - SCOPUS:85204921311
SN - 1929-0748
VL - 13
JO - JMIR Research Protocols
JF - JMIR Research Protocols
M1 - e54046
ER -