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Remote Cognitive Screening Of Healthy Older Adults for Primary Care With the MyCog Mobile App: Iterative Design and Usability Evaluation

BACKGROUND: Annual cognitive screening in adults aged >65 years can improve early detection of cognitive impairment, yet less than half of all cases are identified in primary care. Time constraints in primary care settings present a major barrier to routine screening. A remote cognitive screener...

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Autores principales: Young, Stephanie Ruth, Lattie, Emily Gardiner, Berry, Andrew B L, Bui, Lynn, Byrne, Greg Joseph, Yoshino Benavente, Julia Noelani, Bass, Michael, Gershon, Richard C, Wolf, Michael S, Nowinski, Cindy J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9875000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36626223
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/42416
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author Young, Stephanie Ruth
Lattie, Emily Gardiner
Berry, Andrew B L
Bui, Lynn
Byrne, Greg Joseph
Yoshino Benavente, Julia Noelani
Bass, Michael
Gershon, Richard C
Wolf, Michael S
Nowinski, Cindy J
author_facet Young, Stephanie Ruth
Lattie, Emily Gardiner
Berry, Andrew B L
Bui, Lynn
Byrne, Greg Joseph
Yoshino Benavente, Julia Noelani
Bass, Michael
Gershon, Richard C
Wolf, Michael S
Nowinski, Cindy J
author_sort Young, Stephanie Ruth
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Annual cognitive screening in adults aged >65 years can improve early detection of cognitive impairment, yet less than half of all cases are identified in primary care. Time constraints in primary care settings present a major barrier to routine screening. A remote cognitive screener completed on a patient’s own smartphone before a visit has the potential to save primary care clinics time, encourage broader screening practices, and increase early detection of cognitive decline. OBJECTIVE: We described the iterative design and proposed the implementation of a remote cognitive screening app, MyCog Mobile, to be completed on a patient’s smartphone before an annual wellness visit. The research questions were as follows: What would motivate primary care clinicians and clinic administrators to implement a remote cognitive screening process? How might we design a remote cognitive screener to fit well with existing primary care workflows? What would motivate an older adult patient to complete a cognitive screener on a smartphone before a primary care visit? How might we optimize the user experience of completing a remote cognitive screener on a smartphone for older adults? METHODS: To address research questions 1 and 2, we conducted individual interviews with clinicians (n=5) and clinic administrators (n=3). We also collaborated with clinic administrators to create user journey maps of their existing and proposed MyCog Mobile workflows. To address research questions 3 and 4, we conducted individual semistructured interviews with cognitively healthy older adults (n=5) and solicited feedback from a community stakeholder panel (n=11). We also tested and refined high-fidelity prototypes of the MyCog Mobile app with the older adult interview participants, who rated the usability on the Simplified System Usability Scale and After-Scenario Questionnaire. RESULTS: Clinicians and clinic administrators were motivated to adopt a remote cognitive screening process if it saved time in their workflows. Findings from interviews and user journey mapping informed the proposed implementation and core functionality of MyCog Mobile. Older adult participants were motivated to complete cognitive screeners to ensure that they were cognitively healthy and saw additional benefits to remote screening, such as saving time during their visit and privacy. Older adults also identified potential challenges to remote smartphone screening, which informed the user experience design of the MyCog Mobile app. The average rating across prototype versions was 91 (SD 5.18) on the Simplified System Usability Scale and 6.13 (SD 8.40) on the After-Scenario Questionnaire, indicating above-average usability. CONCLUSIONS: Through an iterative, human-centered design process, we developed a viable remote cognitive screening app and proposed an implementation strategy for primary care settings that was optimized for multiple stakeholders. The next steps include validating the cognitive screener in clinical and healthy populations and piloting the finalized app in a community primary care clinic.
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spelling pubmed-98750002023-01-26 Remote Cognitive Screening Of Healthy Older Adults for Primary Care With the MyCog Mobile App: Iterative Design and Usability Evaluation Young, Stephanie Ruth Lattie, Emily Gardiner Berry, Andrew B L Bui, Lynn Byrne, Greg Joseph Yoshino Benavente, Julia Noelani Bass, Michael Gershon, Richard C Wolf, Michael S Nowinski, Cindy J JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Annual cognitive screening in adults aged >65 years can improve early detection of cognitive impairment, yet less than half of all cases are identified in primary care. Time constraints in primary care settings present a major barrier to routine screening. A remote cognitive screener completed on a patient’s own smartphone before a visit has the potential to save primary care clinics time, encourage broader screening practices, and increase early detection of cognitive decline. OBJECTIVE: We described the iterative design and proposed the implementation of a remote cognitive screening app, MyCog Mobile, to be completed on a patient’s smartphone before an annual wellness visit. The research questions were as follows: What would motivate primary care clinicians and clinic administrators to implement a remote cognitive screening process? How might we design a remote cognitive screener to fit well with existing primary care workflows? What would motivate an older adult patient to complete a cognitive screener on a smartphone before a primary care visit? How might we optimize the user experience of completing a remote cognitive screener on a smartphone for older adults? METHODS: To address research questions 1 and 2, we conducted individual interviews with clinicians (n=5) and clinic administrators (n=3). We also collaborated with clinic administrators to create user journey maps of their existing and proposed MyCog Mobile workflows. To address research questions 3 and 4, we conducted individual semistructured interviews with cognitively healthy older adults (n=5) and solicited feedback from a community stakeholder panel (n=11). We also tested and refined high-fidelity prototypes of the MyCog Mobile app with the older adult interview participants, who rated the usability on the Simplified System Usability Scale and After-Scenario Questionnaire. RESULTS: Clinicians and clinic administrators were motivated to adopt a remote cognitive screening process if it saved time in their workflows. Findings from interviews and user journey mapping informed the proposed implementation and core functionality of MyCog Mobile. Older adult participants were motivated to complete cognitive screeners to ensure that they were cognitively healthy and saw additional benefits to remote screening, such as saving time during their visit and privacy. Older adults also identified potential challenges to remote smartphone screening, which informed the user experience design of the MyCog Mobile app. The average rating across prototype versions was 91 (SD 5.18) on the Simplified System Usability Scale and 6.13 (SD 8.40) on the After-Scenario Questionnaire, indicating above-average usability. CONCLUSIONS: Through an iterative, human-centered design process, we developed a viable remote cognitive screening app and proposed an implementation strategy for primary care settings that was optimized for multiple stakeholders. The next steps include validating the cognitive screener in clinical and healthy populations and piloting the finalized app in a community primary care clinic. JMIR Publications 2023-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9875000/ /pubmed/36626223 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/42416 Text en ©Stephanie Ruth Young, Emily Gardiner Lattie, Andrew B L Berry, Lynn Bui, Greg Joseph Byrne, Julia Noelani Yoshino Benavente, Michael Bass, Richard C Gershon, Michael S Wolf, Cindy J Nowinski. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 10.01.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Young, Stephanie Ruth
Lattie, Emily Gardiner
Berry, Andrew B L
Bui, Lynn
Byrne, Greg Joseph
Yoshino Benavente, Julia Noelani
Bass, Michael
Gershon, Richard C
Wolf, Michael S
Nowinski, Cindy J
Remote Cognitive Screening Of Healthy Older Adults for Primary Care With the MyCog Mobile App: Iterative Design and Usability Evaluation
title Remote Cognitive Screening Of Healthy Older Adults for Primary Care With the MyCog Mobile App: Iterative Design and Usability Evaluation
title_full Remote Cognitive Screening Of Healthy Older Adults for Primary Care With the MyCog Mobile App: Iterative Design and Usability Evaluation
title_fullStr Remote Cognitive Screening Of Healthy Older Adults for Primary Care With the MyCog Mobile App: Iterative Design and Usability Evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Remote Cognitive Screening Of Healthy Older Adults for Primary Care With the MyCog Mobile App: Iterative Design and Usability Evaluation
title_short Remote Cognitive Screening Of Healthy Older Adults for Primary Care With the MyCog Mobile App: Iterative Design and Usability Evaluation
title_sort remote cognitive screening of healthy older adults for primary care with the mycog mobile app: iterative design and usability evaluation
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9875000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36626223
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/42416
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