Development of an app-based maintenance programme to promote skin protection behaviour for patients with work-related skin diseases

Autor(en): Ristow, Nele
Wilke, Annika
John, Swen Malte 
Ludewig, Michaela
Stichwörter: Behaviour change; complex intervention; contact dermatitis; digitalisation; Education & Educational Research; EFFICACY; INTERVENTIONS; MANAGEMENT; prevention; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; QUALITY
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Herausgeber: SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
Enthalten in: HEALTH EDUCATION JOURNAL
Band: 81
Ausgabe: 6
Startseite: 731
Seitenende: 744
Zusammenfassung: 
Objectives: Digital interventions are increasingly used to support behaviour change. In the prevention of chronic work-related skin diseases, the sustainable implementation of appropriate skin protection behaviour following tertiary individual prevention is important. However, there exists no intervention to support the maintenance of these behaviour changes until now. We report the systematic development of a technology-based maintenance programme to support patients to sustainably implement skin protection behaviour and to overcome barriers. Design: Complex intervention development based on a five-step multi-methods process. Setting: Tertiary individual prevention of work-related skin disease in Germany. Methods: Intervention development comprised the following steps: literature review, qualitative focus groups with stakeholders, quantitative assessment of the patients' needs, development of a programme theory, and intervention development and concept validation. Results: We developed a concept for a complex intervention based on results from the literature review, with seven reviews meeting the criteria; qualitative focus groups involving three dermatologists, five health educators, two psychologists and three employees of an accident insurance institution; and a quantitative needs assessment with 72 patients. Key requirements were derived from this process: for example, the need to develop an app to self-monitor skin protection behaviour and skin condition and to inform the individual about ways of dealing with barriers encountered during the uptake and maintenance of skin protection behaviour. In addition, patients will participate in an individual goal-setting exercise to identify individual behavioural goals. Conclusion: A technology-based approach to the prevention of work-related skin diseases was developed. During the process of development, the perspectives of relevant stakeholders and the target group were considered in a participatory way.
ISSN: 0017-8969
DOI: 10.1177/00178969221115990

Show full item record

Page view(s)

1
Last Week
0
Last month
0
checked on Jun 5, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric