# Development of a Mobile App to Support Head and Neck Cancer Caregiving: Mixed Methods Study

**Authors:** Katherine Sterba, Evan Graboyes, Jessica Burris, Megan Scallion, Hannah Kinder, Jama Olsen, Benjamin Toll, Kent Armeson, Terry Day, Bhishamjit Chera, Kenneth Ruggiero

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/66471 · 2025-06-10

## TL;DR

A mobile app called HEART was developed to help caregivers of head and neck cancer survivors manage nutrition-related challenges at home.

## Contribution

The study created a mobile app tailored to caregivers' needs based on mixed methods research involving dietitians and cancer survivors.

## Key findings

- Nutritional tracking, teamwork on care, and decision-making were top priorities for caregivers identified by dietitians.
- Caregivers faced emotional and practical challenges related to nutrition and recovery, highlighting the need for app-based support.
- The HEART app was designed with features like an intake tracker, peer support, and self-care resources based on study findings.

## Abstract

Survivors with head and neck cancer (HNC) face challenging treatment consequences that can lead to severe disruptions in swallowing and result in weight loss, malnutrition, and feeding tube dependence. Caregivers (family or friends who provide support), therefore, often encounter distressing nutritional caregiving burdens and feel unprepared to provide adequate support at home.

The purpose of this mixed methods study was to develop a mobile support app to support HNC caregiving with an emphasis on nutritional support following treatment.

We assessed perspectives on nutritional recovery challenges and mobile support app preferences in (1) a national panel of oncology dietitians using a web-based cross-sectional survey and (2) survivors with HNC completing treatment within the past 24 months and their nominated caregivers using dyadic semistructured interviews. Descriptive statistics for survey data were synthesized with thematic analysis of interview data to characterize nutrition-related perceptions and intervention preferences; results were integrated, and themes were translated to high-priority main menu domains and subdomains for a mobile app for caregivers.

Surveys were completed by dietitians (n=116, 100%; female n=87, 50%, with >10 years practice experience). Interviews included survivors with HNC (n=15; 12/15, 80% male, and 6/15, 40% with oropharynx cancer) and their caregivers (n=13; 11/13, 85% female, and 10/13, 77% spouses). Dietitians, survivors, and caregivers perceived that the majority of nutritional concerns assessed (eg, swallowing, feeding tube management, weight maintenance, and caregiver distress about nutrition) were very or extremely important to caregiving in the 6 months following treatment conclusion. The caregiving tasks rated highest in importance by dietitians included tracking nutritional concerns (n=113, 97%), working together as a team on nutritional concerns (n=104, 90%), and making care decisions (n=102, 88%). Five themes emerged from dyadic interviews, including types of nutritional challenges faced, that competing symptoms were difficult to separate from nutritional challenges, the emotional challenges related to nutrition and recovery, the diverse set of medical and support tasks taken on by caregivers, and information and resource needs in caregivers. Qualitative interview and survey themes guided the content of the Healthy Eating and Recovery Together (HEART) app with an intake tracker and sections for nutrition recovery support, other competing caregiving tips, peer support, and caregiver self-care.

Results pinpointed optimal content for a mobile app for caregivers of individuals with HNC and support the acceptability of implementing the HEART app following HNC treatment.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** head and neck cancer (MONDO:0005627)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HNC (MESH:D006258), oropharynx cancer (MESH:D009959), malnutrition (MESH:D044342), weight loss (MESH:D015431)

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12172808/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12172808