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Digital intervention in loneliness in older adults: A qualitative analysis of user studies

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posted on 2025-08-01, 16:02 authored by A Stuart, RJ Yan, LJ Harkin, D Katz, C Stevenson, V Mehta, E Giles, C Talbot, D Gooch, M Benassar, T Self, B Nuseibeh, B Price
Background: Loneliness is a significant well-being issue that affects older adults. Existing, commonly used social connection platforms do not contain facilities to break the cognitive cycle of loneliness, and loneliness interventions implemented without due processes could have detrimental effects on well-being. There is also a lack of digital technology designed with older adults. Objective: We aimed to iteratively design a user-centered smartphone app that can address loneliness in older adults. The aim of this study was to investigate the loneliness-related psychological processes that our conceptual smartphone app promotes. We also identified the emergent needs and concerns that older adults raised regarding the potential benefits and detriments of the app. Methods: We used technology probes to elicit older adults’ reflections on the concept of using the app in 2 studies as follows: concept focus groups (n=33) and concept interviews (n=10). We then conducted a prototype trial with 1 week of use and follow-up interviews (n=12). Results: Thematic analysis explored the experiences and emergent challenges of our app through the design process. This led to the development of 4 themes as follows occurring in all 3 qualitative data sets: reflection on a digital social map is reassuring; app features encourage socializing; the risk of compounding loneliness; and individuals feel more control with mutual, socially beneficial activities. Conclusions: Smartphone apps have the potential to increase older adults’ awareness of the richness of their social connections, which may support loneliness reduction. Our qualitative approach to app design enabled the inclusion of older adults’ experiences in technology design. Thus, we conclude that the older adults in our study most desired functionalities that can support mutual activities and maintain or find new connections rather than enable them to share an emotional state. They were wary of the app replacing their preferred in-person social interaction. Participants also raised concerns about making the user aware of the lack of support in their social network and wanted specific means of addressing their needs. Further user-centered design work could identify how the app can support mutual activities and socializing.

Funding

EP/R013144/1

EP/V027263/1

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

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©Avelie Stuart, Ronnie Jieru Yan, Lydia Jo Harkin, Dmitri Katz, Clifford Stevenson, Vikram Mehta, Emilie Giles, Catherine Talbot, Daniel Gooch, Mohamed Bennasar, Tara Self, Bashar Nuseibeh, Blaine Price. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 27.01.2023. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included

Notes

This is the final version. Available from JMIR Publications via the DOI in this record. Data Availability: The qualitative study transcripts may contain confidential information and are stored privately in The Open University’s figshare repository; these can be shared on reasonable request to the corresponding author. The technology probes and screen captures of the application are available on internet

Journal

JMIR Formative Research

Publisher

JMIR Publications

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2023-01-27T15:27:16Z

FOA date

2023-01-27T15:32:35Z

Citation

Vol. 7, article 42172

Department

  • Psychology

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