=Paper= {{Paper |id=Vol-2629/1_doc_cruz.pdf |storemode=property |title=Towards Development Guidelines for eHealth Interventions that Support Self-Management of Cardiovascular Diseases: A Holistic, Theory-Based, and Cross-Cultural Approach |pdfUrl=https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2629/1_doc_cruz.pdf |volume=Vol-2629 |authors=Roberto Rafael Cruz-Martínez,Jobke Wentzel,Robbert Sanderman,Julia EWC van Gemert-Pijnen |dblpUrl=https://dblp.org/rec/conf/persuasive/Cruz-MartinezWS20a }} ==Towards Development Guidelines for eHealth Interventions that Support Self-Management of Cardiovascular Diseases: A Holistic, Theory-Based, and Cross-Cultural Approach== https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2629/1_doc_cruz.pdf
     Towards Development Guidelines for eHealth
    Interventions that Support Self-Management of
 Cardiovascular Diseases: A Holistic, Theory-Based, and
               Cross-Cultural Approach

Roberto Rafael Cruz-Martínez1()[0000-0001-9308-364X], Jobke Wentzel1,2[0000-0003-3897-4436], Robbert
     Sanderman1,3[0000-0002-0823-1159], and Julia EWC van Gemert-Pijnen1[0000-0001-6511-7240]

1 Department of Psychology, Health and Technology, Faculty of Behavioural, Management and

         Social sciences, Technical Medical Centre, University of Twente, Enschede, NL
      2 Department of Health and Social studies, Windesheim University of Applied Sciences,

                                            Zwolle, NL
 3 GZW-Health Psychology–GZW-General, University Medical Center Groningen, University

                          of Groningen, Groningen, NL
        {r.cruzmartinez, m.j.wentzel, r.sanderman, j.vangemert-
                           pijnen}@utwente.nl



         Abstract. Cardiovascular diseases constitute an alarming crisis for health care
         worldwide. Technology-based self-management support is proposed as a poten-
         tial solution. However, both the problem and the solution are complex, dynamic,
         and are influenced by a combination of multiple factors. This project aims to
         outline a holistic, theory-based, and cross-cultural approach for the development
         of eHealth interventions supporting self-management of cardiovascular diseases.
         The project has resulted in a review of multidisciplinary frameworks, theories,
         and models. However, questions remain regarding the key factors for tailoring
         interventions to cross-cultural contexts, and how to facilitate this knowledge for
         intervention designers.

         Keywords: Cardiovascular Diseases, Self-Management, eHealth Holistic De-
         velopment


1        Self-Management Support of Cardiovascular Diseases

1.1      The Complexity of the Health Care Problem
Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) constitute an alarming health care crisis due to their
prevalence worldwide [1, 2]. To lessen the burden that CVD cause to health care sys-
tems, the provision of effective, sustainable self-management support to the patients is
considered a key cornerstone of treatment [3]. Self-management is a complex, dynamic,
and time-consuming activity. For patients, it demands the engagement with multiple
behaviors and goals (e.g. patients are prompted to become physically active or quit
smoking). On the other hand, supporting self-management is also enlisted in the many




Persuasive 2020, Adjunct proceedings of the 15th International conference on Persuasive
Technology. Copyright © 2020 for this paper by its authors. Use permitted under Creative Com-
mons License Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
2


time-consuming tasks of health care providers [4] (e.g. bureaucracy in reporting patient
management). Because of the above, the actual level of self-management achieved by
a patient will be determined by a combination of multiple factors (e.g. the characteris-
tics of their condition, their biopsychosocial state, or the surrounding physical, social,
and organizational contexts [5]). The interplay of multiple factors hints towards the
complexity of the problem itself. However, generating a solution also entails unique
challenges, which are discussed below.


1.2    Holistic Development of Electronic Health Interventions
Electronic health (eHealth) can be defined as the use of technology to support health,
well-being, and health care [6]. There is already evidence about the potential of tech-
nology-based interventions to support self-management [7, 8]. However, research on
eHealth is conducted from the perspective of multiple scientific disciplines, which can
often cause overlap or challenges in the accumulation of knowledge. In this regard, the
multidisciplinarity of eHealth is an example of the natural complexity of the proposed
solution to a wicked problem such as the CVD health care crisis. To present a concrete
example, consider how an eHealth intervention must take the assessment or recom-
mended treatment of a health care provider (medical science), then select motivational
prompts or messages that can promote adherence to key behaviors (behavioral science),
and finally deliver them in a salient, persuasive way to the patient (human-technology
interaction science). To tackle this, a holistic, multidisciplinary development of eHealth
is recommended [9, 10]. A holistic approach is defined as one that aims to recognize
the importance of the whole and the interdependence of its parts [10]. In a practical
sense, this proposes that the interaction and reciprocal influence between contextual,
technological, and human factors should be emphasized early and often during eHealth
development, and be informed by multidisciplinary perspectives [9, 10]. In this light, it
is proposed that a holistic development approach must consider multiple perspectives,
from different fields of science, to integrate and analyze various key factors (e.g. indi-
vidual and contextual differences).


1.3    Use of Theories, Models, and Frameworks to Capture, Curate, and
       Accumulate Knowledge
Given the vast and overwhelming amount of research done in the fields of CVD, self-
management, and eHealth, it is a remarkable challenge to capture and generate a holistic
understanding of the problem and any potential solution. One proposed way to tackle
this is to focus on the most structured approaches, such as those informed by clearly
described theories, models, or frameworks. For example, frameworks for the develop-
ment of eHealth interventions are widely available [9, 11, 12]. Likewise, eHealth de-
velopment has been extensively informed by theoretical models that explain underlying
mechanisms of behavior change, technology adoption, or the improvement of health
[13]. For example, the Persuasive Systems Design is a widely known model that pro-
poses means for selecting persuasive technology features that work best to help users
reach their own personal goals [14] or those related to a recommended treatment.
                                                                                                   3


2        Project Aim: Towards Development Guidelines to Tailor
         eHealth Interventions to Cross-Cultural Contexts

The aim of this project is to advance our understanding about how to undertake a ho-
listic development of eHealth interventions to effectively support self-management of
CVD. The project is composed of several key stages (Figure 1). Primarily, the project
takes a holistic approach, meaning it seeks to integrate the (structured) knowledge that
already exists and build upon that. That is why the first task of the project was to bridge
the multidisciplinary gap in the field of eHealth, which was done via a review of mul-
tiple theories, models, and frameworks within the scope of the project [15, 16]. In par-
allel, the project takes a theory-based approach, meaning it attempts to understand and
integrate the propositions of relevant models of science to understand key factors of the
problem and the proposed solution. To do this, the project is using the Middle Range
Theory of Self-Care of Chronic Illness to [17] inform both a patient-centered study (to
investigate key differences in the self-management needs of patients) and an expert-
based vignette survey (to assess expert preferences of persuasive design features for
each self-management needs). Finally, the project seeks to deliver practical guidelines
about how to adapt eHealth interventions to different settings. To do this, lo-fi proto-
types will be generated and evaluated with cross-cultural samples of patients. Currently,
the main research questions that this project is addressing are: What key features are
best and for whom in interventions aiming to improve self-management of CVD
through eHealth? How can we facilitate holistic, theory-based understanding and deci-
sion-making of intervention designers?




    Fig. 1. Key stages of the project using a holistic, theory-based and cross-cultural approach


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