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MyHeartMate: Development of a digital game to improve secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease.

Neubeck, L; Gallagher, R; Ingram, K; Celermajer, D; Schumacher, T; Ferry, C; Buckley, T; Redfern, J; Chow, C; Tofler, G; Figtree, G

Authors

R Gallagher

K Ingram

D Celermajer

T Schumacher

C Ferry

T Buckley

J Redfern

C Chow

G Tofler

G Figtree



Abstract

Background and aim: Low participation in cardiac rehabilitation (CR) means alternative strategies are urgently required to ensure secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Digital games promote behaviour change in other diseases, however, they have not been tested in CVD. The aim was to develop an innovative evidence-based digital game to engage patients in secondary prevention of CVD.

Methods: An iterative design process involving key stakeholders (patients, app developers, cardiologists, nurse researchers, CR nurses, physiotherapist, dietitian, and Heart Foundation representative). The two-month process included (i) Literature search and review of available apps; (ii) concept and design review by consumers; (iii) coding of evidence-based guidelines to inform real-world challenges. Through this process, the MyHeartMate app was developed.

Results: The literature review identified that mobile apps have potential to improve CVD risk factors. Only two studies were found that incorporated gamification strategies (e.g leaderboards, rewards for goal achievement) in their mobile app, although no studies were found which evaluated a digital game. Similarly, no digital games were found in iOS or Android top-100 CVD apps. Ninety real-world challenges were created from evidence-based guidelines for consumer completion. Consumer feedback determined aesthetics of the app. The eventual MyHeartMate app is an interactive digital game in which the health of the heart (Figure) is influenced by real-world actions undertaken by the participant.
Conclusion: A robust design process informed the development of an innovative evidence-based digital game platform for secondary prevention of CVD. This may provide an additional strategy to engage patients who do not participate in CR.

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (published)
Conference Name 64th Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand Annual Scientific Meeting and the International Society for Heart Research Australasian Section Annual Scientific Meeting
Start Date Aug 4, 2016
End Date Aug 7, 2016
Online Publication Date Jul 26, 2016
Publication Date 2016-08
Deposit Date Dec 16, 2016
Journal Heart, Lung and Circulation
Print ISSN 1443-9506
Electronic ISSN 1444-2892
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 25
Issue Supp2
Pages S329-S330
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2016.06.780
Keywords Pulmonary and respiratory medicine, cardiology and cardiovascular medicine,
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/456221