Human-Centric Issues in eHealth App Development and Usage: A Preliminary Assessment
Md. Shamsujjoha, and John Grundy, and Li Li, and Hourieh Khalajzadeh,, and Qinghua Lu

TL;DR
This paper assesses human-centric issues in eHealth app development, emphasizing usability, accessibility, and user experience, and proposes guidelines and solutions to improve inclusivity and effectiveness.
Contribution
It provides an initial assessment of key human factors in eHealth apps through literature review, guidelines analysis, and user studies, highlighting areas needing further research.
Findings
Usability, Accessibility, Reliability, Versatility, and User Experience are crucial HCIs.
Preliminary results identify gaps in current eHealth app development.
Proposed guidelines aim to enhance app inclusivity and effectiveness.
Abstract
Health-related mobile applications are known as eHealth apps. These apps make people more aware of their health, help during critical situations, provide home-based disease management, and monitor/support personalized care through sensing/interaction. eHealth app usage is rapidly increasing with a large number of new apps being developed. Unfortunately, many eHealth apps do not successfully adopt Human-Centric Issues (HCI) in the app development process and its deployment stages, leading them to become ineffective and not inclusive of diverse end-users. This paper provides an initial assessment of key human factors related to eHealth apps by literature review, existing guidelines analysis, and user studies. Preliminary results suggest that Usability, Accessibility, Reliability, Versatility, and User Experience are essential HCIs for eHealth apps, and need further attention from…
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