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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Formative Research

Date Submitted: Jan 25, 2018
Date Accepted: Sep 25, 2018
Date Submitted to PubMed: Jan 26, 2019
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

The iPrevent Online Breast Cancer Risk Assessment and Risk Management Tool: Usability and Acceptability Testing

Lo LL, Collins IM, Bressel M, Butow P, Emery J, Keogh L, Weideman P, Steel E, Hopper JL, Trainer AH, Mann GB, Bickerstaffe A, Antoniou AC, Cuzick J, Phillips KA

The iPrevent Online Breast Cancer Risk Assessment and Risk Management Tool: Usability and Acceptability Testing

JMIR Form Res 2018;2(2):e24

DOI: 10.2196/formative.9935

PMID: 30684421

PMCID: 6334700

The iPrevent Online Breast Cancer Risk Assessment and Risk Management Tool: Usability and Acceptability Testing

  • Louisa L Lo; 
  • Ian M Collins; 
  • Mathias Bressel; 
  • Phyllis Butow; 
  • Jon Emery; 
  • Louise Keogh; 
  • Prue Weideman; 
  • Emma Steel; 
  • John L Hopper; 
  • Alison H Trainer; 
  • Gregory B Mann; 
  • Adrian Bickerstaffe; 
  • Antonis C Antoniou; 
  • Jack Cuzick; 
  • Kelly-Anne Phillips

ABSTRACT

Background:

iPrevent estimates breast cancer (BC) risk and provides tailored risk management information.

Objective:

The objective of this study was to assess the usability and acceptability of the iPrevent prototype.

Methods:

Clinicians were eligible for participation in the study if they worked in primary care, breast surgery, or genetics clinics. Female patients aged 18-70 years with no personal cancer history were eligible. Clinicians were first familiarized with iPrevent using hypothetical paper-based cases and then actor scenarios; subsequently, they used iPrevent with their patients. Clinicians and patients completed the System Usability Scale (SUS) and an Acceptability questionnaire 2 weeks after using iPrevent; patients also completed measures of BC worry, anxiety, risk perception, and knowledge pre- and 2 weeks post-iPrevent. Data were summarized using descriptive statistics.

Results:

The SUS and Acceptability questionnaires were completed by 19 of 20 clinicians and 37 of 43 patients. Usability was above average (SUS score >68) for 68% (13/19) clinicians and 76% (28/37) patients. The amount of information provided by iPrevent was reported as “about right” by 89% (17/19) clinicians and 89% (33/37) patients and 95% (18/19) and 97% (36/37), respectively, would recommend iPrevent to others, although 53% (10/19) clinicians and 27% (10/37) patients found it too long. Exploratory analyses suggested that iPrevent could improve risk perception, decrease frequency of BC worry, and enhance BC prevention knowledge without changing state anxiety.

Conclusions:

The iPrevent prototype demonstrated good usability and acceptability. Because concerns about length could be an implementation barrier, data entry has been abbreviated in the publicly available version of iPrevent.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Lo LL, Collins IM, Bressel M, Butow P, Emery J, Keogh L, Weideman P, Steel E, Hopper JL, Trainer AH, Mann GB, Bickerstaffe A, Antoniou AC, Cuzick J, Phillips KA

The iPrevent Online Breast Cancer Risk Assessment and Risk Management Tool: Usability and Acceptability Testing

JMIR Form Res 2018;2(2):e24

DOI: 10.2196/formative.9935

PMID: 30684421

PMCID: 6334700

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.

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