Designing Voice Interfaces to Support Mindfulness-Based Pain Management
Sanjana Mendu, Sebrina L. Doyle Fosco, Stephanie T. Lanza, Saeed, Abdullah

TL;DR
This study explores using voice interfaces to support mindfulness-based stress reduction for chronic pain management, highlighting facilitators' positive perceptions and design considerations for sustained user engagement.
Contribution
It demonstrates the acceptability of voice interfaces for supporting MBSR home practice and provides design recommendations based on facilitator insights.
Findings
Facilitators support voice interfaces for MBSR, especially for users with limited motor skills.
Voice interfaces offer perceived social presence to enhance engagement.
Design recommendations for future voice-based mindfulness interventions.
Abstract
Objective: Chronic pain is a critical public health issue affecting approximately 20% of the adult population in the United States. Given the opioid crisis, there has been an urgent focus on non-addictive pain management methods including Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR). Prior work has successfully used MBSR for pain management. However, ensuring longitudinal engagement to MBSR practices remains a serious challenge. In this work, we explore the utility of a voice interface to support MBSR home practice. Methods: We interviewed ten mindfulness program facilitators to understand how such a technology might fit in the context of the MBSR class and identify potential usability issues with our prototype. We then used directed content analysis to identify key themes and sub-themes within the interview data. Results: Our findings show that facilitators supported the use of the…
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