An Integrated Model for Evaluating the Sustainability of Gamified Mobile Health Apps: An Instrument Development and Validation.
Abdulsalam Salihu MustafaNor'ashikin AliJaspaljeet Singh DhillonDarshana SederaPublished in: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Mobile health (mHealth) apps are designed to support health behavior outcomes and improve well-being. The existing body of literature confirms mHealth's overall efficacy in promoting physical activity; however, more research on its utility in sustaining user engagement is needed. Understanding the determinants of an individual's willingness to continue using mHealth is vital to improving the intervention's success. This study developed a unified model and survey instrument adapted from extant literature while introducing new constructs to predict the sustained use of gamified mHealth. A pilot study was conducted to validate the survey instrument using 48 gamified fitness app users in Malaysia. The survey instrument was tested following rigorous guidelines for quantitative research in the information system context. According to the findings, the reliabilities of most measurement items met the criterion, and those items were retained. Overall, this paper contributes by integrating social comparison theory and the self-determination theory for sustaining user engagement with gamified mHealth through an extrinsic and intrinsic motivation perspective.
Keyphrases
- physical activity
- systematic review
- patient reported outcomes
- healthcare
- cross sectional
- mental health
- social media
- public health
- randomized controlled trial
- health information
- body composition
- clinical practice
- high resolution
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- climate change
- body mass index
- tyrosine kinase
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- solid phase extraction
- weight loss
- health promotion
- human health
- metabolic syndrome