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Featured researches published by Filipe Barata.


Jmir mhealth and uhealth | 2017

The Potential of Mobile Apps for Improving Asthma Self-Management: A Review of Publicly Available and Well-Adopted Asthma Apps

Peter Tinschert; Robert Jakob; Filipe Barata; Jan-Niklas Kramer; Tobias Kowatsch

Background Effective disease self-management lowers asthma’s burden of disease for both individual patients and health care systems. In principle, mobile health (mHealth) apps could enable effective asthma self-management interventions that improve a patient’s quality of life while simultaneously reducing the overall treatment costs for health care systems. However, prior reviews in this field have found that mHealth apps for asthma lack clinical evaluation and are often not based on medical guidelines. Yet, beyond the missing evidence for clinical efficacy, little is known about the potential apps might have for improving asthma self-management. Objective The aim of this study was to assess the potential of publicly available and well-adopted mHealth apps for improving asthma self-management. Methods The Apple App store and Google Play store were systematically searched for asthma apps. In total, 523 apps were identified, of which 38 apps matched the selection criteria to be included in the review. Four requirements of app potential were investigated: app functions, potential to change behavior (by means of a behavior change technique taxonomy), potential to promote app use (by means of a gamification components taxonomy), and app quality (by means of the Mobile Application Rating Scale [MARS]). Results The most commonly implemented functions in the 38 reviewed asthma apps were tracking (30/38, 79%) and information (26/38, 68%) functions, followed by assessment (20/38, 53%) and notification (18/38, 47%) functions. On average, the reviewed apps applied 7.12 of 26 available behavior change techniques (standard deviation [SD]=4.46) and 4.89 of 31 available gamification components (SD=4.21). Average app quality was acceptable (mean=3.17/5, SD=0.58), whereas subjective app quality lied between poor and acceptable (mean=2.65/5, SD=0.87). Additionally, the sum scores of all review frameworks were significantly correlated (lowest correlation: r36=.33, P=.04 between number of functions and gamification components; highest correlation: r36=.80, P<.001 between number of behavior change techniques and gamification components), which suggests that an app’s potential tends to be consistent across review frameworks. Conclusions Several apps were identified that performed consistently well across all applied review frameworks, thus indicating the potential mHealth apps offer for improving asthma self-management. However, many apps suffer from low quality. Therefore, app reviews should be considered as a decision support tool before deciding which app to integrate into a patient’s asthma self-management. Furthermore, several research-practice gaps were identified that app developers should consider addressing in future asthma apps.


ubiquitous computing | 2016

Personal MobileCoach: tailoring behavioral interventions to the needs of individual participants

Filipe Barata; Tobias Kowatsch; Peter Tinschert; Andreas Filler

MobileCoach, an open source behavioral intervention platform, has been developed to provide health professionals with an authoring tool to design evidence-based, scalable and low-cost digital health interventions (DHI). Its potential meets the lack in resources and capacity of health care systems to provide DHI for the treatment of noncommunicable diseases. In the current work, we introduce the first personalization approach for MobileCoach with the purpose of identifying the needs of participants, tailoring the treatment and, as a consequence, enhancing the capability of MobileCoach-based DHIs. The personalization approach is then exemplified by a very first prototype of a DHI for people with asthma that is able to detect coughing by just using a smartphones microphone. First empirical results with five healthy subjects and 80 coughs indicate its technical feasibility as the detection accuracy yielded 83.3%. Future work will focus on the integration of personalized sensing and supporting applications for MobileCoach.


International Conference on Design Science Research in Information System and Technology | 2017

Design and Evaluation of a Mobile Chat App for the Open Source Behavioral Health Intervention Platform MobileCoach

Tobias Kowatsch; Dirk Volland; Iris Shih; Dominik Rüegger; Florian Künzler; Filipe Barata; Andreas Filler; Dirk Büchter; Björn Brogle; Katrin Heldt; Pauline Gindrat; Nathalie Farpour-Lambert; Dagmar l’Allemand

The open source platform MobileCoach (mobile-coach.eu) has been used for various behavioral health interventions in the public health context. However, so far, MobileCoach is limited to text message-based interactions. That is, participants use error-prone and laborious text-input fields and have to bear the SMS costs. Moreover, MobileCoach does not provide a dedicated chat channel for individual requests beyond the processing capabilities of its chatbot. Intervention designers are also limited to text-based self-report data. In this paper, we thus present a mobile chat app with pre-defined answer options, a dedicated chat channel for patients and health professionals and sensor data integration for the MobileCoach platform. Results of a pretest (N = 11) and preliminary findings of a randomized controlled clinical trial (N = 14) with young patients, who participate in an intervention for the treatment of obesity, are promising with respect to the utility of the chat app.


Persuasive Embodied Agents for Behavior Change (PEACH2017) | 2017

Text-based Healthcare Chatbots Supporting Patient and Health Professional Teams: Preliminary Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial on Childhood Obesity

Tobias Kowatsch; Marcia Nißen; Chen-Hsuan Iris Shih; Dominik Rüegger; Dirk Volland; Andreas Filler; Florian Künzler; Filipe Barata; Dirk Büchter; Björn Brogle; Katrin Heldt; Pauline Gindrat; Nathalie Farpour-Lambert; Dagmar l’Allemand


CSS Health Insurance meets CDHI Event 2017 | 2017

Therapy Adherence of Obese Children in a 6-Month High-Frequency Intervention

Iris Shih; Dirk Volland; Dominik Rüegger; Florian Künzler; Filipe Barata; Andreas Filler; Dirk Büchter; Björn Brogle; Katrin Heldt; Pauline Gindrat; Natalie Farpour-Lambert; Elgar Fleisch; Dagmar l'Allemand; Tobias Kowatsch


Archive | 2018

Smartphone-based Cough and Sleep Quality Detection

Filipe Barata; Peter Tinschert; Frank Rassouli; Florent Baty; Martin Brutsche; Claudia Steurer-Stey; Milo A. Puhan; Elgar Fleisch; Tobias Kowatsch


Wirtschaftsinformatik und Angewandte Informatik | 2017

Enhancing Asthma Control through IT: Design, Implementation and Planned Evaluation of the Mobile Asthma Companion

Peter Tinschert; Filipe Barata; Tobias Kowatsch


Designing the Digital Transformation: DESRIST 2017 | 2017

Design and Evaluation of a Mobile Chat App for the Open Source Behavioural Health Intervention Platform MobileCoach

Tobias Kowatsch; Dirk Volland; Chen-Hsuan Iris Shih; Dominik Rüegger; Florian Künzler; Filipe Barata; Andreas Filler; Dirk Büchter; Björn Brogle; Katrin Heldt; Pauline Gindrat; Nathalie Farpour-Lambert; Dagmar l'Allemand


CSS Health Insurance meets CDHI Event 2017 | 2017

Health Literacy Video Clips for Children with Asthma

Alexander Möller; Helmut Oswald; Ullrich Dittler; Franca Meyer; Maja Schaub; Filipe Barata; Peter Tinschert; Jean-Marie Egger; Elgar Fleisch; Tobias Kowatsch


CSS Health Insurance meets CDHI Event 2017 | 2017

Digital Health Literacy Intervention for Children with Asthma

Tobias Kowatsch; Filipe Barata; Peter Tinschert; Ullrich Dittler; Jean-Marie Egger; Franca Meyer; Maja Schaub; Elgar Fleisch; Helmut Oswald; Alexander Möller

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Dirk Volland

University of St. Gallen

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Elgar Fleisch

University of St. Gallen

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Björn Brogle

Boston Children's Hospital

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Dirk Büchter

Boston Children's Hospital

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Katrin Heldt

Boston Children's Hospital

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