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Usability of a Patient Education and Motivation Tool Using Heuristic Evaluation

Abstract

Background:
Computer-mediated educational applications can provide a self-paced, interactive environment to deliver educational content to individuals about their health condition. These programs have been used to deliver health-related information about a variety of topics, including breast cancer screening, asthma management, and injury prevention. We have designed the Patient Education and Motivation Tool (PEMT), an interactive computer-based educational program based on behavioral, cognitive, and humanistic learning theories. The tool is designed to educate users and has three key components: screening, learning, and evaluation.

Objective:
The objective of this tutorial is to illustrate a heuristic evaluation using a computer-based patient education program (PEMT) as a case study. The aims were to improve the usability of PEMT through heuristic evaluation of the interface; to report the results of these usability evaluations; to make changes based on the findings of the usability experts; and to describe the benefits and limitations of applying usability evaluations to PEMT.

Methods:
PEMT was evaluated by three usability experts using Nielsen’s usability heuristics while reviewing the interface to produce a list of heuristic violations with severity ratings. The violations were sorted by heuristic and ordered from most to least severe within each heuristic.

Results:
A total of 127 violations were identified with a median severity of 3 (range 0 to 4 with 0 = no problem to 4 = catastrophic problem). Results showed 13 violations for visibility (median severity = 2), 38 violations for match between system and real world (median severity = 2), 6 violations for user control and freedom (median severity = 3), 34 violations for consistency and standards (median severity = 2), 11 violations for error severity (median severity = 3), 1 violation for recognition and control (median severity = 3), 7 violations for flexibility and efficiency (median severity = 2), 9 violations for aesthetic and minimalist design (median severity = 2), 4 violations for help users recognize, diagnose, and recover from errors (median severity = 3), and 4 violations for help and documentation (median severity = 4).

Conclusion:
We describe the heuristic evaluation method employed to assess the usability of PEMT, a method which uncovers heuristic violations in the interface design in a quick and efficient manner. Bringing together usability experts and health professionals to evaluate a computer-mediated patient education program can help to identify problems in a timely manner. This makes this method particularly well suited to the iterative design process when developing other computer-mediated health education programs. Heuristic evaluations provided a means to assess the user interface of PEMT.

Joshi, Ashish, Mohit Arora, Liwei Dai, Kathleen Price, Lisa Vizer, and Andrew Sears. "Usability of a Patient Education and Motivation Tool Using Heuristic Evaluation." J Med Internet Res 11, no. 4 (November 6, 2009): e47.  

8 November 2009

Bibliographic Data

Title:

Usability of a Patient Education and Motivation Tool Using Heuristic Evaluation

Author(s):

Joshi, Ashish; Arora, Mohit; Dai, Liwei; Price, Kathleen; Vizer, Lisa; Sears, Andrew

Journal

J Med Internet Res, 11(4), pp. e47
(2009-11-06)

URL:

Full article

DOI:

10.2196/jmir.1244

PMID:

19897458

Keywords:

, , , , ,

Citation:

Joshi, Ashish, Mohit Arora, Liwei Dai, Kathleen Price, Lisa Vizer, and Andrew Sears. "Usability of a Patient Education and Motivation Tool Using Heuristic Evaluation." J Med Internet Res 11, no. 4 (November 6, 2009): e47.  

Other Publications

In ICMCC Database

All J Med Internet Res articles (68).

Other article(s) by

Ashish Joshi (1).

Andrew Sears (1).

Mohit Arora (1).

Discussion