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Using intervention mapping to develop a digital self-management programme for people with type 2 diabetes: MyDESMOND

journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-11, 08:18 authored by M Hadjiconstantinou, S Schreder, C Brough, A Northern, B Stribling, K Khunti, Melanie Davies

Background: Digital health interventions (DHI) are increasingly becoming integrated in diabetes self-management to improve behaviour. Despite DHIs becoming available to people with chronic conditions, the development strategies and processes undertaken are often not well described. With theoretical frameworks available in the current literature, it is vital that DHIs follow a shared language and communicate a robust development process in a comprehensive way. Objectives: This paper aims to bring a unique perspective to digital development, as it describes the systematic process of developing a digital self-management programme for people with type 2 diabetes, MyDESMOND. Methods: We provide a step-by-step guide, based on the Intervention Mapping (IM) framework to illustrate the process of adapting an existing face-to-face self-management programme (DESMOND) and translating it to a digital platform (MyDESMOND). Overall, this paper describes the four IM steps that were followed in order to develop MyDESMOND. Step 1: establish a planning group and a patient and public involvement group to describe the context of the intervention and programme goals. Step 2: identify objectives and determinants at early design stages to maintain a focus on the strategies adopted. Step 3: generate the programme components underpinned by appropriate psychological theories and models. Step 4: develop the programme content and describe the iterative process of refining the content and format of the digital programme for implementation. Conclusions: This paper concludes with a number of key learnings collated throughout our development process, which we hope other researchers may find useful when developing DHIs in chronic conditions.

Funding

The authors would like to thank the web-developers and the patient and public involvement group for their invaluable input in the development of MyDESMOND. The authors would also like to thank the multi-disciplinary team and the public who contributed to the testimonial and expert videos. The authors also acknowledge support from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) East Midlands, the NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC), which is a partnership between University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust and the University of Leicester. The programme was funded by the Leicester Diabetes Centre

History

Citation

Journal of Medical Internet Research (2020) In Press

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Medical Internet Research

Publisher

JMIR Publications

issn

1438-8871

Acceptance date

2020-02-07

Copyright date

2020

Publisher version

TBC

Language

en

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