Design and Preliminary Evaluation of a Mobile Application for Obesity Experts and Children Teams (Abstract)
Journal
Obesity Reviews
ISSN
1467-7881
ISSN-Digital
1467-789X
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2014-12
Author(s)
Büchter, Dirk
Pletikosa Cvijikj, Irena
Xu, Runhua
Brogle, Björn
Dintheer, Anneco
Wiegand, Dunja
l'Allemand, Dagmar
Abstract
Childhood obesity is one of the major disease patterns of the twenty-first century. Due to the need for multi-professional therapies requiring intensive personnel and financial resources, IT-supported interventions promise help. Meta analyses, however, show their limited impact on health outcomes up till now. The current work aims therefore to design and evaluate a mobile application that in-creases the cooperation between obesity experts and children. For that purpose, four IT experts, five therapists, nine obese children 10 to 14 years old and their parents adopted a structured design-science methodology. Perceived characteristics of the application and direct effects on cooperation of therapists and children were evaluated. The resulting application provides recipe recommendations based on ingredients available at home and desired by children. It further allows to document groceries and meals via a photo functionality. All interactions with the application were recorded to document screen time and utilization for efficient shopping and healthy meals. First feedback from seven therapists, six children and their parents indicates that the application is perceived useful, easy and fun to use. With regard to direct effects on the cooperation between obesity expert and children teams, there is evidence that the appli-cation supports shared understanding and cross understanding. Future work will incorporate further components of therapy programs, such as physi-cal activity or relaxation, but will also investigate in a longitudinal field study how the use of this application within a therapy program influences health condition of obese children.
Language
English
Keywords
health information system
obesity
nutrition
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Publisher place
Oxford
Number
0
Start page
1
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
225602