An mHealth App and System Architecture for Respiratory Disease Management: Design Principles, Tool Development, and Pilot Usability Study

Chao A, Martignetti L, Groh R, Kist A, Li-Jessen NY (2025)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2025

Journal

Book Volume: 9

Article Number: e73584

DOI: 10.2196/73584

Abstract

Background: Mobile health (mHealth) apps are software interfaces that enable users to access and manage wearable technology through smartphones and tablet devices for health improvement purposes. However, many respiratory disease mHealth apps lack transparent development documentation, compromising user confidence in their quality, functionality, and usability. Objective: This study aimed to develop and evaluate AIrway, a companion mHealth app designed to interface with an in-house wearable device for monitoring airway symptoms following established mHealth development and reporting standards. Methods: The development cycle of AIrway comprised 2 study phases. In phase 1, AIrway, a native Android app, was developed following academic and industrial standards (Android material design and Morville’s design principles) and privacy regulations (Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act). Core functionalities included location-based environmental monitoring, a clinical diary with action plans, Bluetooth connectivity, and real-time data storage. In phase 2, the usability of AIrway was evaluated by software app developers using standardized assessment tools, namely, the User Version of the Mobile Application Rating Scale survey and the IQVIA questionnaire. Results: AIrway successfully fulfilled 7 of 8 development criteria on usability, privacy, security, appropriateness, transparency, safety, and technical support, with only the technology aspects requiring refinement. Accessibility assessments confirmed that AIrway’s content and interface were comprehensible to the general population (grade 9-10 reading level). Technical testing demonstrated reliable Bluetooth data transmission for up to 10 minutes without interruption. User evaluation scores for the User Version of the Mobile Application Rating Scale (3.6/5.0) and IQVIA (8/11) were comparable to those of similar mHealth apps on the market. Conclusions: By adhering to established mHealth app design principles, AIrway achieved the necessary accessibility standards and wireless communication capabilities for wearable device integration. Future development will focus on expanding cross-platform compatibility and conducting usability evaluation with intended patient populations to validate its clinical effectiveness and support ongoing improvements.

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How to cite

APA:

Chao, A., Martignetti, L., Groh, R., Kist, A., & Li-Jessen, N.Y. (2025). An mHealth App and System Architecture for Respiratory Disease Management: Design Principles, Tool Development, and Pilot Usability Study. JMIR Formative Research, 9. https://doi.org/10.2196/73584

MLA:

Chao, Andrew, et al. "An mHealth App and System Architecture for Respiratory Disease Management: Design Principles, Tool Development, and Pilot Usability Study." JMIR Formative Research 9 (2025).

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