Appl Clin Inform 2014; 05(04): 958-970
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2014-08-RA-0067
Research Article
Schattauer GmbH

User-Centered Design and Usability Testing of an Innovative Health-Related Quality of Life Module

Z. J. Nagykaldi
1   University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine
,
M. Jordan
2   University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, School of Medicine
,
J. Quitoriano
2   University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, School of Medicine
,
C.A. Ciro
3   University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Department of Rehabilitation Sciences
,
J.W. Mold
1   University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Correspondence to:

Zsolt J. Nagykaldi, PhD
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine
900 NE 10th Street
Oklahoma City, OK 73104
Phone: (405) 271–2370   
Phone: (405) 271–2784   

Publication History

received: 09 September 2014

accepted: 18 November 2014

Publication Date:
19 December 2017 (online)

 

Summary

Objectives: Various computerized health risk appraisals (HRAs) are available, but few of them assess health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in a goal-directed framework. This study describes the user-centered development and usability testing of an innovative HRQoL module that extends a validated HRA tool in primary care settings.

Methods: Systematic user-centered design, usability testing, and qualitative methods were used to develop the HRQoL module in primary care practices. Twenty two patients and 5 clinicians participated in two rounds of interactive technology think-out-loud sessions (TOLs) and semi-structured interviews (SSIs) to iteratively develop a four-step, computerized process that collects information on patient goals for meaningful life activities and current level of disability and presents a personalized and prioritized list of preventive recommendations linked to online resources.

Results: Analysis of TOLs and SSIs generated 5 categories and 11 sub-categories related to facilitators and barriers to usability and human-technology interaction. The categories included: Understanding the Purpose, Usability, Perceived Value, Literacy, and Participant Motivation. Some categories were inter-connected. The technology was continually and iteratively improved between sessions until saturation of positive feedback was achieved in 4 categories (addressing motivation will require more research). Usability of all screen units of the module was improved substantially. Clinician feedback emphasized the importance of the module’s ability to translate the patient-centered HRQoL Report into actionable items for clinicians to facilitate shared decision-making. Complete integration of the HRQoL module into the existing HRA will require further development and testing.

Conclusions: Systematic application of user-centered design and human factors principles in technology development and testing may significantly improve the usability and clinical value of health information systems. This more sophisticated approach helped us translate complex clinical concepts, goal-setting steps, and decision-support processes into an accepted and value-added technology.

Citation: Nagykaldi ZJ; Jordan M; Quitoriano J; Ciro CA; Mold JW. User-centered design and usability testing of an innovative health-related quality of life module. Appl Clin Inf 2014; 5: 958–970

http://dx.doi.org/10.4338/ACI-2014-08-RA-0067


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Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors report no conflicts of interest in the presented research.


Correspondence to:

Zsolt J. Nagykaldi, PhD
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine
900 NE 10th Street
Oklahoma City, OK 73104
Phone: (405) 271–2370   
Phone: (405) 271–2784