Barriers to using eHealth/mHealth platforms and perceived beneficial eHealth/mHealth platform features among informal carers of persons living with dementia: a qualitative study.

Ellaisha Samari, Qi Yuan, YunJue Zhang, Anitha Jeyagurunathan, Mythily Subramaniam
Author Information
  1. Ellaisha Samari: Institute of Mental Health, Research Division, 10 Buangkok View, Singapore, 539747, Singapore. ellaisha_samari@imh.com.sg.
  2. Qi Yuan: Institute of Mental Health, Research Division, 10 Buangkok View, Singapore, 539747, Singapore.
  3. YunJue Zhang: Institute of Mental Health, Research Division, 10 Buangkok View, Singapore, 539747, Singapore.
  4. Anitha Jeyagurunathan: Institute of Mental Health, Research Division, 10 Buangkok View, Singapore, 539747, Singapore.
  5. Mythily Subramaniam: Institute of Mental Health, Research Division, 10 Buangkok View, Singapore, 539747, Singapore.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: New technologies have brought about a new age of technology-enabled aids that can equip informal carers with the relevant resources for better care. These include but are not limited to facilitating access to healthcare providers, knowledge of caring for persons living with dementia, and sources of support for carers' well-being. This qualitative study explores barriers to using eHealth/mHealth platforms and perceived beneficial eHealth/mHealth platform features among informal carers of persons living with dementia.
METHODS: An exploratory qualitative study design was employed. Semi-structured interviews were conducted among 29 informal carers of persons living with dementia in Singapore recruited via convenience and snowball sampling. The interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data.
RESULTS: The participants in this study identified several barriers to using eHealth/mHealth platforms, including personal preference, apprehension, poor user experience and lack of skills. On the other hand, knowledge of dementia, caring for persons living with dementia and self-care, a list of resources, social support, location monitoring and alert systems, and the ability to manage appointments and transactions were valuable features for eHealth/mHealth platforms.
CONCLUSIONS: Despite the underutilisation of eHealth/mHealth platforms, carers expressed a keen interest in using them if they are functional and capable of reducing their care burden. The findings from this study can contribute to developing content and features for eHealth/mHealth interventions aimed at lightening carers' burden in their day-to-day caring routine.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. (Ref no.: NMRC/CG/M002/2017_IMH)/This research is supported by the Singapore Ministry of Health's National Medical Research Council under the Centre Grant Programme
  2. (Ref no.: NMRC/CG/M002/2017_IMH)/This research is supported by the Singapore Ministry of Health's National Medical Research Council under the Centre Grant Programme
  3. (Ref no.: NMRC/CG/M002/2017_IMH)/This research is supported by the Singapore Ministry of Health's National Medical Research Council under the Centre Grant Programme
  4. (Ref no.: NMRC/CG/M002/2017_IMH)/This research is supported by the Singapore Ministry of Health's National Medical Research Council under the Centre Grant Programme
  5. (Ref no.: NMRC/CG/M002/2017_IMH)/This research is supported by the Singapore Ministry of Health's National Medical Research Council under the Centre Grant Programme

MeSH Term

Humans
Caregivers
Health Personnel
Telemedicine
Knowledge
Dementia

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0eHealth/mHealthcarerspersonslivingdementiastudyplatformsinformalusingfeaturescaringqualitativeamongcanresourcescareknowledgesupportcarers'barriersperceivedbeneficialplatforminterviewsburdenBACKGROUND:Newtechnologiesbroughtnewagetechnology-enabledaidsequiprelevantbetterincludelimitedfacilitatingaccesshealthcareproviderssourceswell-beingexploresMETHODS:exploratorydesignemployedSemi-structuredconducted29Singaporerecruitedviaconveniencesnowballsamplingaudio-recordedtranscribedverbatimThematicanalysisusedanalysedataRESULTS:participantsidentifiedseveralincludingpersonalpreferenceapprehensionpooruserexperiencelackskillshandself-carelistsociallocationmonitoringalertsystemsabilitymanageappointmentstransactionsvaluableCONCLUSIONS:Despiteunderutilisationexpressedkeeninterestfunctionalcapablereducingfindingscontributedevelopingcontentinterventionsaimedlighteningday-to-dayroutineBarriersdementia:CarerDementiaQualitativeTechnologyeHealthmHealth

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