TY - JOUR AU - Mehdizadeh, Hamed AU - Asadi, Farkhondeh AU - Nazemi, Eslam AU - Mehrvar, Azim AU - Yazdanian, Azade AU - Emami, Hassan PY - 2023 DA - 2023/3/30 TI - A Mobile Self-Management App (CanSelfMan) for Children With Cancer and Their Caregivers: Usability and Compatibility Study JO - JMIR Pediatr Parent SP - e43867 VL - 6 KW - Digital health KW - eHealth KW - Telehealth KW - mHealth KW - Mobile app KW - self-management KW - cancer KW - child KW - parent KW - caregiver KW - usability evaluation AB - Background: Despite the increasing development of different smartphone apps in the health care domain, most of these apps lack proper evaluation. In fact, with the rapid development of smartphones and wireless communication infrastructure, many health care systems around the world are using these apps to provide health services for people without sufficient scientific efforts to design, develop, and evaluate them. Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the usability of CanSelfMan, a self-management app that provides access to reliable information to improve communication between health care providers and children with cancer and their parents/caregivers, facilitating remote monitoring and promoting medication adherence. Methods: We performed debugging and compatibility tests in a simulated environment to identify possible errors. Then, at the end of the 3-week period of using the app, children with cancer and their parents/caregivers filled out the User Experience Questionnaire (UEQ) to evaluate the usability of the CanSelfMan app and their level of user satisfaction. Results: During the 3 weeks of CanSelfMan use, 270 cases of symptom evaluation and 194 questions were recorded in the system by children and their parents/caregivers and answered by oncologists. After the end of the 3 weeks, 44 users completed the standard UEQ user experience questionnaire. According to the children’s evaluations, attractiveness (mean 1.956, SD 0.547) and efficiency (mean 1.934, SD 0.499) achieved the best mean results compared with novelty (mean 1.711, SD 0.481). Parents/caregivers rated efficiency at a mean of 1.880 (SD 0.316) and attractiveness at a mean of 1.853 (SD 0.331). The lowest mean score was reported for novelty (mean 1.670, SD 0.225). Conclusions: In this study, we describe the evaluation process of a self-management system to support children with cancer and their families. Based on the feedback and scores obtained from the usability evaluation, it seems that the children and their parents find CanSelfMan to be an interesting and practical idea to provide reliable and updated information on cancer and help them manage the complications of this disease. SN - 2561-6722 UR - https://pediatrics.jmir.org/2023/1/e43867 UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/43867 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36995746 DO - 10.2196/43867 ID - info:doi/10.2196/43867 ER -