Ethnographic evaluation of usability, understandability, and acceptance of the MY PD-CARE digital tool to facilitate Parkinson’s disease symptom tracking and patients’ and care partners’ communications with the treating healthcare professional : the SELF-AWARE study
(2025) In Neurological Sciences 46(10). p.5061-5071- Abstract
Background and aim: The MY PD-CARE digital tool is intended to empower people with Parkinson’s disease (PD) and care partners to actively identify and track changes in key symptoms of advancing PD and to facilitate discussions with healthcare professionals (HCPs). MY PD-CARE was adapted from MANAGE-PD, a validated, web-based tool that helps HCPs identify patients with inadequate symptom control. The SELF-AWARE (Study on Ethnographic research and human factors evaLuation For a tool to increase AWareness, self-Assessment, and Reporting of PD patiEnts uncontrolled on oral medication) study investigated MY PD-CARE ease of use, understandability, and acceptance among people with PD and their care partners. Methods: SELF-AWARE was a... (More)
Background and aim: The MY PD-CARE digital tool is intended to empower people with Parkinson’s disease (PD) and care partners to actively identify and track changes in key symptoms of advancing PD and to facilitate discussions with healthcare professionals (HCPs). MY PD-CARE was adapted from MANAGE-PD, a validated, web-based tool that helps HCPs identify patients with inadequate symptom control. The SELF-AWARE (Study on Ethnographic research and human factors evaLuation For a tool to increase AWareness, self-Assessment, and Reporting of PD patiEnts uncontrolled on oral medication) study investigated MY PD-CARE ease of use, understandability, and acceptance among people with PD and their care partners. Methods: SELF-AWARE was a non-interventional, cross-sectional, observational study. Participants (patients/care partners) assessed MY PD-CARE during 1-time virtual interviews conducted by trained medical anthropologists using qualitative ethnographic and human factor evaluation methods. Results: In 90.7% of interviews (43 patients; 31 care partners), ≥ 1 patient/care partner participant was comfortable with technology. Most participants understood the purpose/objective of MY PD-CARE and agreed it was simple and easy to use. Although the medical terminology was not fully self-explanatory to many participants, half found the glossary helpful. Approximately 60% indicated MY PD-CARE could have more value with free-text input. Participants agreed that MY PD-CARE is useful for tracking symptoms and encouraging discussions with HCPs. Conclusions: People with PD and their care partners perceived MY PD-CARE as useful and acceptable for tracking and increasing awareness of symptoms and facilitating discussions with HCPs. Participant feedback helped optimize the updated design of this digital tool.
(Less)
- author
- Antonini, Angelo
; Henriksen, Tove
; Hursey, Amelia
; Bergmann, Lars
; Parra, Juan Carlos
and Odin, Per
LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2025-10
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Chronic, Digital health, Health communications, Mixed methods, Neurology, Neuroscience
- in
- Neurological Sciences
- volume
- 46
- issue
- 10
- pages
- 11 pages
- publisher
- Springer-Verlag Italia s.r.l.
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:105011098761
- pmid:40679689
- ISSN
- 1590-1874
- DOI
- 10.1007/s10072-025-08342-0
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- additional info
- Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2025.
- id
- 14d0033c-c9e3-48ed-98b3-7ee92b8e2543
- date added to LUP
- 2026-01-16 12:56:16
- date last changed
- 2026-01-17 03:00:02
@article{14d0033c-c9e3-48ed-98b3-7ee92b8e2543,
abstract = {{<p>Background and aim: The MY PD-CARE digital tool is intended to empower people with Parkinson’s disease (PD) and care partners to actively identify and track changes in key symptoms of advancing PD and to facilitate discussions with healthcare professionals (HCPs). MY PD-CARE was adapted from MANAGE-PD, a validated, web-based tool that helps HCPs identify patients with inadequate symptom control. The SELF-AWARE (Study on Ethnographic research and human factors evaLuation For a tool to increase AWareness, self-Assessment, and Reporting of PD patiEnts uncontrolled on oral medication) study investigated MY PD-CARE ease of use, understandability, and acceptance among people with PD and their care partners. Methods: SELF-AWARE was a non-interventional, cross-sectional, observational study. Participants (patients/care partners) assessed MY PD-CARE during 1-time virtual interviews conducted by trained medical anthropologists using qualitative ethnographic and human factor evaluation methods. Results: In 90.7% of interviews (43 patients; 31 care partners), ≥ 1 patient/care partner participant was comfortable with technology. Most participants understood the purpose/objective of MY PD-CARE and agreed it was simple and easy to use. Although the medical terminology was not fully self-explanatory to many participants, half found the glossary helpful. Approximately 60% indicated MY PD-CARE could have more value with free-text input. Participants agreed that MY PD-CARE is useful for tracking symptoms and encouraging discussions with HCPs. Conclusions: People with PD and their care partners perceived MY PD-CARE as useful and acceptable for tracking and increasing awareness of symptoms and facilitating discussions with HCPs. Participant feedback helped optimize the updated design of this digital tool.</p>}},
author = {{Antonini, Angelo and Henriksen, Tove and Hursey, Amelia and Bergmann, Lars and Parra, Juan Carlos and Odin, Per}},
issn = {{1590-1874}},
keywords = {{Chronic; Digital health; Health communications; Mixed methods; Neurology; Neuroscience}},
language = {{eng}},
number = {{10}},
pages = {{5061--5071}},
publisher = {{Springer-Verlag Italia s.r.l.}},
series = {{Neurological Sciences}},
title = {{Ethnographic evaluation of usability, understandability, and acceptance of the MY PD-CARE digital tool to facilitate Parkinson’s disease symptom tracking and patients’ and care partners’ communications with the treating healthcare professional : the SELF-AWARE study}},
url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10072-025-08342-0}},
doi = {{10.1007/s10072-025-08342-0}},
volume = {{46}},
year = {{2025}},
}