What Matters Most to Veterans When Deciding to Use Technology for Health: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey

BackgroundThere is an increasingly diverse range of mobile apps and digital health devices available to help patients manage their health. Despite evidence for the effectiveness of such technologies, their potential has not been fully realized because adoption remains low. Su...

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Main Authors: Bella Etingen, Bridget M Smith, Stephanie L Shimada, Stephanie A Robinson, Robin T Higashi, Ndindam Ndiwane, Kathleen L Frisbee, Jessica M Lipschitz, Eric Richardson, Dawn Irvin, Timothy P Hogan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2025-08-01
Series:JMIR Formative Research
Online Access:https://formative.jmir.org/2025/1/e77113
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author Bella Etingen
Bridget M Smith
Stephanie L Shimada
Stephanie A Robinson
Robin T Higashi
Ndindam Ndiwane
Kathleen L Frisbee
Jessica M Lipschitz
Eric Richardson
Dawn Irvin
Timothy P Hogan
author_facet Bella Etingen
Bridget M Smith
Stephanie L Shimada
Stephanie A Robinson
Robin T Higashi
Ndindam Ndiwane
Kathleen L Frisbee
Jessica M Lipschitz
Eric Richardson
Dawn Irvin
Timothy P Hogan
author_sort Bella Etingen
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundThere is an increasingly diverse range of mobile apps and digital health devices available to help patients manage their health. Despite evidence for the effectiveness of such technologies, their potential has not been fully realized because adoption remains low. Such limited uptake can have direct implications for the intended benefits of these technologies. ObjectiveThis study aimed to understand what matters most to US military veterans when deciding whether to use digital health technologies (DHTs) such as mobile health apps or devices to manage their health and compare these factors between veterans with and without prevalent chronic physical and mental health conditions. MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional analysis of survey data collected from a national sample of veterans who receive care from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), which was predominantly gathered as part of the last wave of a larger longitudinal data collection effort. ResultsAmong respondents (n=857), 86.7% (736/849) reported currently using or having previously used ≥1 devices to manage their health, and 78.4% (639/815) also reported using either VHA or non-VHA health apps. Considerations most frequently endorsed as “very important” by veterans when deciding whether to use DHTs included receiving secure messages from their health care team about DHTs, knowing data from DHTs would be used to inform their care, and receiving recommendations from providers to use DHTs. Conversely, considerations most frequently endorsed as “not at all important” included seeing information about DHTs on social media, having community support to use DHTs, and receiving encouragement from peers to use DHTs. Considerations did not significantly differ between veterans with or without prevalent chronic health conditions; however, a greater proportion of veterans with prevalent mental health conditions reported the following considerations to be “very important:” seeing information about DHTs on social media, having community support to use DHTs, having other veterans encourage DHT use, and having help from family, friends, or other important people to use DHTs. ConclusionsUnderstanding what matters most to patients when they are deciding to adopt a technology for their health can, and should, inform implementation strategies and other approaches to enhance health-related technology use. Our results suggest that, for veterans, recommendations from health care team members and knowing that the data from DHTs will be used in clinical care are more important than information from social media, community sources, or peers when deciding to use DHTs, although perceptions of importance regarding the latter may differ among patients with different conditions. Our findings suggest that communication from health care team members to patients, perhaps either in-person or electronically, could help encourage DHT adoption and use.
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spelling doaj-art-edfe1c2a61bd49f5870d01bef6bc1c052025-08-20T04:01:08ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Formative Research2561-326X2025-08-019e7711310.2196/77113What Matters Most to Veterans When Deciding to Use Technology for Health: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National SurveyBella Etingenhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1325-9073Bridget M Smithhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-3301-8843Stephanie L Shimadahttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6517-5122Stephanie A Robinsonhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-1352-217XRobin T Higashihttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5232-6852Ndindam Ndiwanehttps://orcid.org/0009-0003-2415-8216Kathleen L Frisbeehttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0194-4009Jessica M Lipschitzhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4085-0507Eric Richardsonhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0855-3350Dawn Irvinhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-8578-4868Timothy P Hoganhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6888-0927 BackgroundThere is an increasingly diverse range of mobile apps and digital health devices available to help patients manage their health. Despite evidence for the effectiveness of such technologies, their potential has not been fully realized because adoption remains low. Such limited uptake can have direct implications for the intended benefits of these technologies. ObjectiveThis study aimed to understand what matters most to US military veterans when deciding whether to use digital health technologies (DHTs) such as mobile health apps or devices to manage their health and compare these factors between veterans with and without prevalent chronic physical and mental health conditions. MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional analysis of survey data collected from a national sample of veterans who receive care from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), which was predominantly gathered as part of the last wave of a larger longitudinal data collection effort. ResultsAmong respondents (n=857), 86.7% (736/849) reported currently using or having previously used ≥1 devices to manage their health, and 78.4% (639/815) also reported using either VHA or non-VHA health apps. Considerations most frequently endorsed as “very important” by veterans when deciding whether to use DHTs included receiving secure messages from their health care team about DHTs, knowing data from DHTs would be used to inform their care, and receiving recommendations from providers to use DHTs. Conversely, considerations most frequently endorsed as “not at all important” included seeing information about DHTs on social media, having community support to use DHTs, and receiving encouragement from peers to use DHTs. Considerations did not significantly differ between veterans with or without prevalent chronic health conditions; however, a greater proportion of veterans with prevalent mental health conditions reported the following considerations to be “very important:” seeing information about DHTs on social media, having community support to use DHTs, having other veterans encourage DHT use, and having help from family, friends, or other important people to use DHTs. ConclusionsUnderstanding what matters most to patients when they are deciding to adopt a technology for their health can, and should, inform implementation strategies and other approaches to enhance health-related technology use. Our results suggest that, for veterans, recommendations from health care team members and knowing that the data from DHTs will be used in clinical care are more important than information from social media, community sources, or peers when deciding to use DHTs, although perceptions of importance regarding the latter may differ among patients with different conditions. Our findings suggest that communication from health care team members to patients, perhaps either in-person or electronically, could help encourage DHT adoption and use.https://formative.jmir.org/2025/1/e77113
spellingShingle Bella Etingen
Bridget M Smith
Stephanie L Shimada
Stephanie A Robinson
Robin T Higashi
Ndindam Ndiwane
Kathleen L Frisbee
Jessica M Lipschitz
Eric Richardson
Dawn Irvin
Timothy P Hogan
What Matters Most to Veterans When Deciding to Use Technology for Health: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey
JMIR Formative Research
title What Matters Most to Veterans When Deciding to Use Technology for Health: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey
title_full What Matters Most to Veterans When Deciding to Use Technology for Health: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey
title_fullStr What Matters Most to Veterans When Deciding to Use Technology for Health: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey
title_full_unstemmed What Matters Most to Veterans When Deciding to Use Technology for Health: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey
title_short What Matters Most to Veterans When Deciding to Use Technology for Health: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Survey
title_sort what matters most to veterans when deciding to use technology for health cross sectional analysis of a national survey
url https://formative.jmir.org/2025/1/e77113
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