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An Expert and Veteran User Assessment of the Usability of an Alcohol Reduction App for Military Veterans, <i>Drinks:</i>Ration: A Mixed-Methods Pilot Study

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An Expert and Veteran User Assessment of the Usability of an Alcohol Reduction App for Military Veterans, <i>Drinks:</i>Ration: A Mixed-Methods Pilot Study. / Williamson, Charlotte; Dryden, Danielle; Palmer, Laura et al.
In: Military Behavioral Health, 06.12.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Williamson, C., Dryden, D., Palmer, L., Rona, R., Simms, A., Fear, N. T., Goodwin, L., Murphy, D., & Leightley, D. (2022). An Expert and Veteran User Assessment of the Usability of an Alcohol Reduction App for Military Veterans, <i>Drinks:</i>Ration: A Mixed-Methods Pilot Study. Military Behavioral Health. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/21635781.2022.2151532

Vancouver

Williamson C, Dryden D, Palmer L, Rona R, Simms A, Fear NT et al. An Expert and Veteran User Assessment of the Usability of an Alcohol Reduction App for Military Veterans, <i>Drinks:</i>Ration: A Mixed-Methods Pilot Study. Military Behavioral Health. 2022 Dec 6. Epub 2022 Dec 6. doi: 10.1080/21635781.2022.2151532

Author

Williamson, Charlotte ; Dryden, Danielle ; Palmer, Laura et al. / An Expert and Veteran User Assessment of the Usability of an Alcohol Reduction App for Military Veterans, <i>Drinks:</i>Ration : A Mixed-Methods Pilot Study. In: Military Behavioral Health. 2022.

Bibtex

@article{a68d2f2987304b1baaa2f7b701da892c,
title = "An Expert and Veteran User Assessment of the Usability of an Alcohol Reduction App for Military Veterans, Drinks:Ration: A Mixed-Methods Pilot Study",
abstract = "The development of mobile health applications (apps) is growing exponentially. Alcohol reduction apps can break down perceived barriers of seeking help for alcohol misuse, potentially making them more appealing than face-to-face methods. App usability is therefore essential in supporting individuals misusing alcohol. Alcohol misuse is common in the UK Armed Forces, therefore smartphone-based alcohol interventions could be valuable for this population. The aim of this pilot study was to assess the usability of Drinks:Ration, an alcohol reduction app for military veterans. Participants downloaded and used Drinks:Ration for 14-days (n = 16), completed a usability questionnaire (n = 14; 88%) and a semi-structured interview (n = 12; 75%). The mean usability score across all measures was 6.09 (SD 1.37), out of 7, indicating good usability. Three core themes were identified: simplicity; appropriateness for veterans; and engagement. Drinks:Ration was a usable app for veterans to monitor their alcohol consumption. Veteran users were more critical than expert users about the usefulness of the app. Feedback was incorporated into the app, where possible, to improve usability. Improvements included adding extra drink options, removing device notification sounds and adding a pop-up to each page which provides information about the features of the app on first use.",
keywords = "Military, armed forces, veteran, smartphone app, brief intervention, mobile health, alcohol misuse, pilot study",
author = "Charlotte Williamson and Danielle Dryden and Laura Palmer and Roberto Rona and Amos Simms and Fear, {Nicola T.} and Laura Goodwin and Dominic Murphy and Daniel Leightley",
year = "2022",
month = dec,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1080/21635781.2022.2151532",
language = "English",
journal = "Military Behavioral Health",
issn = "2163-5781",
publisher = "Informa UK Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - An Expert and Veteran User Assessment of the Usability of an Alcohol Reduction App for Military Veterans, Drinks:Ration

T2 - A Mixed-Methods Pilot Study

AU - Williamson, Charlotte

AU - Dryden, Danielle

AU - Palmer, Laura

AU - Rona, Roberto

AU - Simms, Amos

AU - Fear, Nicola T.

AU - Goodwin, Laura

AU - Murphy, Dominic

AU - Leightley, Daniel

PY - 2022/12/6

Y1 - 2022/12/6

N2 - The development of mobile health applications (apps) is growing exponentially. Alcohol reduction apps can break down perceived barriers of seeking help for alcohol misuse, potentially making them more appealing than face-to-face methods. App usability is therefore essential in supporting individuals misusing alcohol. Alcohol misuse is common in the UK Armed Forces, therefore smartphone-based alcohol interventions could be valuable for this population. The aim of this pilot study was to assess the usability of Drinks:Ration, an alcohol reduction app for military veterans. Participants downloaded and used Drinks:Ration for 14-days (n = 16), completed a usability questionnaire (n = 14; 88%) and a semi-structured interview (n = 12; 75%). The mean usability score across all measures was 6.09 (SD 1.37), out of 7, indicating good usability. Three core themes were identified: simplicity; appropriateness for veterans; and engagement. Drinks:Ration was a usable app for veterans to monitor their alcohol consumption. Veteran users were more critical than expert users about the usefulness of the app. Feedback was incorporated into the app, where possible, to improve usability. Improvements included adding extra drink options, removing device notification sounds and adding a pop-up to each page which provides information about the features of the app on first use.

AB - The development of mobile health applications (apps) is growing exponentially. Alcohol reduction apps can break down perceived barriers of seeking help for alcohol misuse, potentially making them more appealing than face-to-face methods. App usability is therefore essential in supporting individuals misusing alcohol. Alcohol misuse is common in the UK Armed Forces, therefore smartphone-based alcohol interventions could be valuable for this population. The aim of this pilot study was to assess the usability of Drinks:Ration, an alcohol reduction app for military veterans. Participants downloaded and used Drinks:Ration for 14-days (n = 16), completed a usability questionnaire (n = 14; 88%) and a semi-structured interview (n = 12; 75%). The mean usability score across all measures was 6.09 (SD 1.37), out of 7, indicating good usability. Three core themes were identified: simplicity; appropriateness for veterans; and engagement. Drinks:Ration was a usable app for veterans to monitor their alcohol consumption. Veteran users were more critical than expert users about the usefulness of the app. Feedback was incorporated into the app, where possible, to improve usability. Improvements included adding extra drink options, removing device notification sounds and adding a pop-up to each page which provides information about the features of the app on first use.

KW - Military

KW - armed forces

KW - veteran

KW - smartphone app

KW - brief intervention

KW - mobile health

KW - alcohol misuse

KW - pilot study

U2 - 10.1080/21635781.2022.2151532

DO - 10.1080/21635781.2022.2151532

M3 - Journal article

JO - Military Behavioral Health

JF - Military Behavioral Health

SN - 2163-5781

ER -