TY - JOUR AU - Waterlander, Wilma AU - Whittaker, Robyn AU - McRobbie, Hayden AU - Dorey, Enid AU - Ball, Kylie AU - Maddison, Ralph AU - Myers Smith, Katie AU - Crawford, David AU - Jiang, Yannan AU - Gu, Yulong AU - Michie, Jo AU - Ni Mhurchu, Cliona PY - 2014 DA - 2014/07/11 TI - Development of an Evidence-Based mHealth Weight Management Program Using a Formative Research Process JO - JMIR Mhealth Uhealth SP - e18 VL - 2 IS - 3 KW - weight loss KW - intervention KW - Internet KW - mobile phone KW - focus groups AB - Background: There is a critical need for weight management programs that are effective, cost efficient, accessible, and acceptable to adults from diverse ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds. mHealth (delivered via mobile phone and Internet) weight management programs have potential to address this need. To maximize the success and cost-effectiveness of such an mHealth approach it is vital to develop program content based on effective behavior change techniques, proven weight management programs, and closely aligned with participants’ needs. Objective: This study aims to develop an evidence-based mHealth weight management program (Horizon) using formative research and a structured content development process. Methods: The Horizon mHealth weight management program involved the modification of the group-based UK Weight Action Program (WAP) for delivery via short message service (SMS) and the Internet. We used an iterative development process with mixed methods entailing two phases: (1) expert input on evidence of effective programs and behavior change theory; and (2) target population input via focus group (n=20 participants), one-on-one phone interviews (n=5), and a quantitative online survey (n=120). Results: Expert review determined that core components of a successful program should include: (1) self-monitoring of behavior; (2) prompting intention formation; (3) promoting specific goal setting; (4) providing feedback on performance; and (5) promoting review of behavioral goals. Subsequent target group input confirmed that participants liked the concept of an mHealth weight management program and expressed preferences for the program to be personalized, with immediate (prompt) and informative text messages, practical and localized physical activity and dietary information, culturally appropriate language and messages, offer social support (group activities or blogs) and weight tracking functions. Most target users expressed a preference for at least one text message per day. We present the prototype mHealth weight management program (Horizon) that aligns with those inputs. Conclusions: The Horizon prototype described in this paper could be used as a basis for other mHealth weight management programs. The next priority will be to further develop the program and conduct a full randomized controlled trial of effectiveness. SN - 22915222 UR - http://www.jmir.org/2014/3/e18/ UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/mhealth.2850 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25098337 DO - 10.2196/mhealth.2850 ID - info:doi/10.2196/mhealth.2850 ER -