Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Language

English

Publication Date

11-27-2025

Journal

JMIR Formative Research

DOI

10.2196/75623

PMID

41313164

PMCID

PMC12661604

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

11-27-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Background: Emerging adulthood is a high-risk period during which many with type 1 diabetes demonstrate suboptimal diabetes management and glycemic control. There is a need for effective, scalable interventions designed specifically for this population. Technology-based approaches are readily accessible to this age group. Furthermore, interventions consistent with self-determination theory-which posits that the fulfillment of psychological needs for autonomy, self-efficacy, and relatedness promotes intrinsic motivation for change-may resonate well with emerging adults' developmental needs for establishing independence and autonomy, and growing their social network.

Objective: This study aimed to enhance the potential relevance, sustainability, and efficacy of 3 self-determination theory-informed mobile health intervention components and content for emerging adults with type 1 diabetes. Key areas of interest included emerging adults' perspectives on the use of cultural tailoring, developmental relevance of content, and delivery preferences.

Methods: In this qualitative formative study, 20 emerging adults reviewed and provided feedback on 3 newly developed intervention components via individual interviews. Ten reviewed the motivation enhancement system, a 2-session counseling intervention grounded in motivational interviewing and designed to enhance emerging adults' autonomy and self-efficacy for diabetes self-management. Ten reviewed the SMS text messaging reminder intervention (one-way text message reminders to complete diabetes care) and the question prompt list (a list of questions related to diabetes care designed to increase patients' active participation during medical visits). Interviews were analyzed using framework matrix analysis, an efficient approach to inductive thematic analysis.

Results: Emerging adults found all 3 interventions acceptable and helpful. They noted the interventions' integration into the technology they already use as a strength. Across interventions, emerging adults also expressed a preference for culturally tailored intervention content, including intervention examples, actors, and language representing their illness experience, identity, and personal preferences. Intervention-specific feedback suggested emerging adults liked motivation enhancement system intervention elements that were engaging (videos) and relatable (peer testimonials), and supported their growing autonomy and independence. For SMS text messaging reminders, emerging adults appreciated the straightforward nature of the reminders and recommended more directive messages. They appreciated the range of topics and variety of messages. Suggestions included making the messages more impactful (eg, direct, personalized, and engaging, such as using emojis). Emerging adults saw the question prompt list content areas as relevant and well-aligned with their concerns highlighting the topic of transitioning to adult life with diabetes as particularly salient.

Conclusions: Emerging adult feedback supports the acceptability and use of these intervention components and will be used to refine the interventions. Feedback was especially positive regarding cultural and other tailoring efforts, as well as content directed at their pending transition to full independence. At the same time, their input suggests the need for multiple specific modifications, highlighting the importance of intensive and detailed feedback from end users.

Keywords

Humans, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1, Telemedicine, Qualitative Research, Female, Male, Young Adult, Adult, Self Efficacy, Self-Management, Motivation, Adolescent, Personal Autonomy, Motivational Interviewing, behavioral intervention, eHealth, emerging adults, type 1 diabetes, young adults

Published Open-Access

yes

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Public Health Commons

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