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Technology Acceptance in Mobile Health: Scoping Review of Definitions, Models, and Measurement

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Technology Acceptance in Mobile Health: Scoping Review of Definitions, Models, and Measurement. / Nadal, C.; Sas, C.; Doherty, G.
In: Journal of Medical Internet Research, Vol. 22, No. 7, e17256, 06.07.2020.

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Nadal C, Sas C, Doherty G. Technology Acceptance in Mobile Health: Scoping Review of Definitions, Models, and Measurement. Journal of Medical Internet Research. 2020 Jul 6;22(7):e17256. doi: 10.2196/17256

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Nadal, C. ; Sas, C. ; Doherty, G. / Technology Acceptance in Mobile Health: Scoping Review of Definitions, Models, and Measurement. In: Journal of Medical Internet Research. 2020 ; Vol. 22, No. 7.

Bibtex

@article{998624fc09d5498a8bb8999a6422e102,
title = "Technology Acceptance in Mobile Health: Scoping Review of Definitions, Models, and Measurement",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Designing technologies that users will be interested in, start using, and keep using has long been a challenge. In the health domain, the question of technology acceptance is even more important, as the possible intrusiveness of technologies could lead to patients refusing to even try them. Developers and researchers must address this question not only in the design and evaluation of new health care technologies but also across the different stages of the user's journey. Although a range of definitions for these stages exists, many researchers conflate related terms, and the field would benefit from a coherent set of definitions and associated measurement approaches. OBJECTIVE: This review aims to explore how technology acceptance is interpreted and measured in mobile health (mHealth) literature. We seek to compare the treatment of acceptance in mHealth research with existing definitions and models, identify potential gaps, and contribute to the clarification of the process of technology acceptance. METHODS: We searched the PubMed database for publications indexed under the Medical Subject Headings terms {"}Patient Acceptance of Health Care{"} and {"}Mobile Applications.{"} We included publications that (1) contained at least one of the terms {"}acceptability,{"} {"}acceptance,{"} {"}adoption,{"} {"}accept,{"} or {"}adopt{"}; and (2) defined the term. The final corpus included 68 relevant studies. RESULTS: Several interpretations are associated with technology acceptance, few consistent with existing definitions. Although the literature has influenced the interpretation of the concept, usage is not homogeneous, and models are not adapted to populations with particular needs. The prevalence of measurement by custom surveys suggests a lack of standardized measurement tools. CONCLUSIONS: Definitions from the literature were published separately, which may contribute to inconsistent usage. A definition framework would bring coherence to the reporting of results, facilitating the replication and comparison of studies. We propose the Technology Acceptance Lifecycle, consolidating existing definitions, articulating the different stages of technology acceptance, and providing an explicit terminology. Our findings illustrate the need for a common definition and measurement framework and the importance of viewing technology acceptance as a staged process, with adapted measurement methods for each stage. {\textcopyright}Camille Nadal, Corina Sas, Gavin Doherty. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 06.07.2020.",
keywords = "mHealth, mobile applications, mobile phone, patient acceptance, Technology Acceptance Lifecycle",
author = "C. Nadal and C. Sas and G. Doherty",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
day = "6",
doi = "10.2196/17256",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
journal = "Journal of Medical Internet Research",
issn = "1439-4456",
publisher = "JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Technology Acceptance in Mobile Health: Scoping Review of Definitions, Models, and Measurement

AU - Nadal, C.

AU - Sas, C.

AU - Doherty, G.

PY - 2020/7/6

Y1 - 2020/7/6

N2 - BACKGROUND: Designing technologies that users will be interested in, start using, and keep using has long been a challenge. In the health domain, the question of technology acceptance is even more important, as the possible intrusiveness of technologies could lead to patients refusing to even try them. Developers and researchers must address this question not only in the design and evaluation of new health care technologies but also across the different stages of the user's journey. Although a range of definitions for these stages exists, many researchers conflate related terms, and the field would benefit from a coherent set of definitions and associated measurement approaches. OBJECTIVE: This review aims to explore how technology acceptance is interpreted and measured in mobile health (mHealth) literature. We seek to compare the treatment of acceptance in mHealth research with existing definitions and models, identify potential gaps, and contribute to the clarification of the process of technology acceptance. METHODS: We searched the PubMed database for publications indexed under the Medical Subject Headings terms "Patient Acceptance of Health Care" and "Mobile Applications." We included publications that (1) contained at least one of the terms "acceptability," "acceptance," "adoption," "accept," or "adopt"; and (2) defined the term. The final corpus included 68 relevant studies. RESULTS: Several interpretations are associated with technology acceptance, few consistent with existing definitions. Although the literature has influenced the interpretation of the concept, usage is not homogeneous, and models are not adapted to populations with particular needs. The prevalence of measurement by custom surveys suggests a lack of standardized measurement tools. CONCLUSIONS: Definitions from the literature were published separately, which may contribute to inconsistent usage. A definition framework would bring coherence to the reporting of results, facilitating the replication and comparison of studies. We propose the Technology Acceptance Lifecycle, consolidating existing definitions, articulating the different stages of technology acceptance, and providing an explicit terminology. Our findings illustrate the need for a common definition and measurement framework and the importance of viewing technology acceptance as a staged process, with adapted measurement methods for each stage. ©Camille Nadal, Corina Sas, Gavin Doherty. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 06.07.2020.

AB - BACKGROUND: Designing technologies that users will be interested in, start using, and keep using has long been a challenge. In the health domain, the question of technology acceptance is even more important, as the possible intrusiveness of technologies could lead to patients refusing to even try them. Developers and researchers must address this question not only in the design and evaluation of new health care technologies but also across the different stages of the user's journey. Although a range of definitions for these stages exists, many researchers conflate related terms, and the field would benefit from a coherent set of definitions and associated measurement approaches. OBJECTIVE: This review aims to explore how technology acceptance is interpreted and measured in mobile health (mHealth) literature. We seek to compare the treatment of acceptance in mHealth research with existing definitions and models, identify potential gaps, and contribute to the clarification of the process of technology acceptance. METHODS: We searched the PubMed database for publications indexed under the Medical Subject Headings terms "Patient Acceptance of Health Care" and "Mobile Applications." We included publications that (1) contained at least one of the terms "acceptability," "acceptance," "adoption," "accept," or "adopt"; and (2) defined the term. The final corpus included 68 relevant studies. RESULTS: Several interpretations are associated with technology acceptance, few consistent with existing definitions. Although the literature has influenced the interpretation of the concept, usage is not homogeneous, and models are not adapted to populations with particular needs. The prevalence of measurement by custom surveys suggests a lack of standardized measurement tools. CONCLUSIONS: Definitions from the literature were published separately, which may contribute to inconsistent usage. A definition framework would bring coherence to the reporting of results, facilitating the replication and comparison of studies. We propose the Technology Acceptance Lifecycle, consolidating existing definitions, articulating the different stages of technology acceptance, and providing an explicit terminology. Our findings illustrate the need for a common definition and measurement framework and the importance of viewing technology acceptance as a staged process, with adapted measurement methods for each stage. ©Camille Nadal, Corina Sas, Gavin Doherty. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 06.07.2020.

KW - mHealth

KW - mobile applications

KW - mobile phone

KW - patient acceptance

KW - Technology Acceptance Lifecycle

U2 - 10.2196/17256

DO - 10.2196/17256

M3 - Journal article

VL - 22

JO - Journal of Medical Internet Research

JF - Journal of Medical Internet Research

SN - 1439-4456

IS - 7

M1 - e17256

ER -