Authors
Rebecca Schnall, Hwayoung Cho, Jianfang Liu
Publication date
2018/1/5
Journal
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Volume
6
Issue
1
Pages
e8851
Publisher
JMIR Publications Inc., Toronto, Canada
Description
Background: Mobile technology has become a ubiquitous technology and can be particularly useful in the delivery of health interventions. This technology can allow us to deliver interventions to scale, cover broad geographic areas, and deliver technologies in highly tailored ways based on the preferences or characteristics of users. The broad use of mobile technologies supports the need for usability assessments of these tools. Although there have been a number of usability assessment instruments developed, none have been validated for use with mobile technologies.
Objective: The goal of this work was to validate the Health Information Technology Usability Evaluation Scale (Health-ITUES), a customizable usability assessment instrument in a sample of community-dwelling adults who were testing the use of a new mobile health (mHealth) technology.
Methods: A sample of 92 community-dwelling adults living with HIV used a new mobile app for symptom self-management and completed the Health-ITUES to assess the usability of the app. They also completed the Post-Study System Usability Questionnaire (PSSUQ), a widely used and well-validated usability assessment tool. Correlations between these scales and each of the subscales were assessed.
Results: The subscales of the Health-ITUES showed high internal consistency reliability (Cronbach alpha=. 85-. 92). Each of the Health-ITUES subscales and the overall scale was moderately to strongly correlated with the PSSUQ scales (r=. 46-. 70), demonstrating the criterion validity of the Health-ITUES.
Conclusions: The Health-ITUES has demonstrated reliability and validity for use in …
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