Implementation of a coach-supported mHealth intervention for dementia prevention in China: a qualitative study among Chinese participants and coaches in the PRODEMOS trial
Jinxia Zhang, Marieke P Hoevenaar-Blom, Xuening Jian, Haifeng Hou, Siqi Ge, Carol Brayne, Esmé Eggink, Melanie Hafdi, Mingyue He, Guohua Wang, Wenzhi Wang, Wei Zhang, Yueyi Yu, Yixuan Niu, Jihui Lyu, Libin Song, Wei Wang, Youxin Wang, Eric P Moll van Charante, Manshu Song

TL;DR
A mobile health app with remote coaching was tested in China to help prevent dementia by promoting lifestyle changes, and it was found to be acceptable and feasible for users.
Contribution
This is the first qualitative study of the PRODEMOS mHealth intervention in China, highlighting its implementation and acceptability for dementia prevention.
Findings
Participants found the PRODEMOS app easy to use and remote coaching convenient, though communication delays were noted.
Feasibility depended on factors like smartphone literacy, daily routine integration, and coach-participant relationships.
Positive feedback suggests potential for large-scale implementation if coaching and engagement challenges are addressed.
Abstract
Modifiable risk factors have been linked to 45% of dementia cases. Mobile health (mHealth) interventions targeting lifestyle-related risk factors with remote coaching have the potential to reach underserved high-risk populations globally. To date, little is known about the implementation of such interventions in China. Fifty semi-structured interviews were conducted with 14 participants and 11 health coaches involved in the PRODEMOS trial. This trial investigated whether a coach-supported mHealth application intervention can reduce dementia risk in people aged 55–75 years with multiple risk factors. Interviews were conducted three months and 12–18 months into the intervention, focusing on implementation outcomes among Chinese participants using thematic analysis. Participants found the PRODEMOS app easy to use and remote coaching convenient, although coach responses were sometimes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Mental Health Interventions · Mobile Health and mHealth Applications · COVID-19 and Mental Health
