HCCYApr 15, 2020

Investigating usability of mobile health applications in Bangladesh

arXiv:2004.07044v188 citations
AI Analysis

This research addresses usability barriers for mobile health adoption in Bangladesh, but it is incremental as it applies existing evaluation methods to a new context.

The study investigated the usability of mobile health applications in Bangladesh, finding that 61% of usability problems were catastrophic or major, with aesthetic and minimalist design being the most violated heuristic, and user studies confirmed low usability scores.

Background: Lack of usability can be a major barrier for the rapid adoption of mobile services. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the usability of Mobile Health applications in Bangladesh. Method: We followed a 3-stage approach in our research. First, we conducted a keyword-based application search in the popular app stores. We followed the affinity diagram approach and clustered the found applications into nine groups. Second, we randomly selected four apps from each group (36 apps in total) and conducted a heuristic evaluation. Finally, we selected the highest downloaded app from each group and conducted user studies with 30 participants. Results: We found 61% usability problems are catastrophe or major in nature from heuristic inspection. The most (21%) violated heuristic is aesthetic and minimalist design. The user studies revealed low System Usability Scale (SUS) scores for those apps that had a high number of usability problems based on the heuristic evaluation. Thus, the results of heuristic evaluation and user studies complement each other. Conclusion: Overall, the findings suggest that the usability of the mobile health apps in Bangladesh is not satisfactory in general and could be a potential barrier for wider adoption of mobile health services.

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