Co-Development of a Web Application (COVID-19 Social Site) for Long-Term Care Workers (“Something for Us”): User-Centered Design and Participatory Research Study


Introduction

COVID-19 vaccination rates among long-term care workers (LTCWs) vary across the United States, partly due to a patchwork of legal challenges to a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services vaccination mandate []. Full vaccination rates range from 70% to 99%, with booster rates trailing from 17% to 56% [].

Long-term care settings have been major outbreak sites throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to illness and death among vulnerable residents and staff. Researchers of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that more than 2300 LTCWs and 151,000 residents have died from COVID-19. COVID-19 outbreaks threaten LTCWs themselves and their often underserved communities []. More than half of LTCWs are from disadvantaged socioeconomic, racial, or ethnic groups []. LTCWs from underserved communities and those with lower educational attainment are less likely to be vaccinated for COVID-19 than those from advantaged backgrounds []. Long-term care staff shortages predate the pandemic, but recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show a further loss of nearly 400,000 LTCWs from 2020 to 2021 [,].

Because LTCWs care for the frailest elderly, increasing vaccine confidence and uptake in this population while simultaneously supporting and retaining the LTCW workforce is a critical public health need.

Although improving vaccine confidence and uptake among LTCWs is challenging, social media is a promising potential solution. Social media–based interventions can suit marginalized groups and LTCWs already relying on social media for information (personal communication, Matthew Cantrell, April 2021)[]. Randomized trials of social media interventions have shown some success, largely in improving attitudes about other vaccines [-]. When combined with selected information from medical experts and communication between participants, they have also improved vaccine uptake [,]. As far as we know, no social media web applications target LTCWs and address their questions and concerns about COVID-19 vaccines. It is unknown whether this type of intervention would improve confidence or uptake of COVID-19 vaccines and boosters.

We aimed to fill this gap by developing a curated social media web application for LTCWs with low confidence in COVID-19 vaccines.


MethodsStudy Design

We conducted a user-centered design and participatory research study to develop, qualitatively assess (usability and acceptability), and deploy a social media web application (interactive website) called the COVID-19 Social Site [,]. We curated and customized the site for LTCWs with low COVID-19 vaccine confidence within a broader randomized clinical trial (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05168800), funded by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (COVID-2021C2-13181).

We reported results using the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research (CORE-Q) and the Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys (CHERRIES) [,].

Participatory Approach

Our National Association of Health Care Assistants (NAHCA) partners were critical to web application development. Their deep expertise in long-term care informed development from conception to launch.

We recruited 10 LTCW partners from diverse backgrounds and positions as part of a stakeholder advisory group, which met regularly. Our partners were instrumental in designing and developing the web app, and providing iterative feedback and advice throughout all stages of the project. Their feedback is captured throughout this manuscript ().

Theoretical Framework and Context

We conceived this intervention within a broader comparative effectiveness trial with 2 interventions guided by the theoretical framework by Peretti-Watel et al for vaccine hesitancy, which considers vaccine hesitancy a decision-making process, not a static state [,]. Therefore, interventions that increase knowledge in the right context could also increase vaccine confidence and uptake []. Emerging evidence suggests that multi-component dialogue-based interventions can be effective, particularly when context and hesitancy drivers are taken into account. Developers must also tailor content, format, and delivery to specific audiences [].

Ethics Approval

Dartmouth College’s Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects approved this study (STUDY00032340).

Step 1. Content IdentificationDesktop Research

We first identified the common questions and concerns associated with low COVID-19 vaccine confidence by reviewing information from the published literature, public opinion polls, and social media. Given the evolving pandemic, we had a flexible search strategy ().

We developed a dynamic list of questions and concerns by consulting with our team (including LTCW partners and other stakeholders) and cross-checking with existing resources []. We grouped the questions and concerns into top-level topics. We refined topic wording with plain language principles [].

LTCW Stakeholder Consultation

We shared our top-level topics with our LTCW stakeholder advisors via semistructured interviews. We have provided details on the interview population, recruitment, procedures, and analysis ([,]), and the interview guide ()[,].

We polled our LTCW partners to assess the content mix they wanted on the web application, including questions about the source (platform and creator), type, quantity, and tone of posts. Our questionnaire is presented in .

National Online Panel Survey

We deployed a Qualtrics (Seattle, WA) survey () using members of an existing panel to gain insights from a model population on the perceived importance of different COVID-19 vaccine-related information. [-] provides further details about survey development, sampling, recruitment, and analysis [,,].

Content Curation

We sourced material from popular social media web applications according to the preferences identified by LTCWs via interviews and a poll. We plan to continue sourcing content () throughout the life of the site.

Content Processing and Fact-Checking

The content team identified social media posts of interest and logged them along with basic details (eg, date posted, the platform of origin, and engagement metrics). We used a category-based system with hashtags.

We designed a fact-checking process () in consultation with our broader advisory group, including LTCW partners and other stakeholders. The study team also reviewed each post to confirm appropriateness in light of content mix preferences.

Step 2. Platform DevelopmentLTCW Stakeholder Consultation

We presented our initial concept for the web application to our LTCW stakeholders, soliciting information about the desired look, feel, and functionality iteratively and during the semistructured interviews mentioned in Step 1. We have provided details on the methods in .

Web Application Wireframes and Initial Build

We shared our initial concept informed by stakeholder insight with a web design and development company. They advised on the functionality, and look and feel of the web application. The web team developed initial wireframes and the preliminary site on WordPress, primarily using Blade, Javascript, Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP), and Sassy Cascading Style Sheets (SCSS) scripting languages. We iteratively modified and tested the site with the study team, LTCW partners, and other stakeholders.

User Experience Testing

After testing and modifying initial wireframes with LTCW partners and other stakeholders, we conducted one-on-one user experience (UX) and user interface (UI) testing sessions with LTCWs who were naive to the study and its goals. We also solicited UX and UI feedback from LTCW partners and other stakeholders during meetings. [, -] provides more details on our testing approach, including our affinity mapping analysis [-].

Step 3. Community BuildingLTCW Stakeholder Consultation

During interviews and stakeholder meetings, we asked LTCWs how they wanted the web application to operate and what kind of moderation or guidance we should use. We reviewed the community standards of popular Facebook groups focusing on COVID-19 vaccine discussion. Further details on our approach to community building are provided in [].


ResultsParticipatory Approach

LTCWs were integral to every stage of this web application development project. Our LTCW partners noted:

Certified nursing assistants are often overlooked and dismissed. We help individuals every day, but it is an honor to be given the opportunity to help so many people on such a large scale.
[LTCW stakeholder]To have my opinion considered and appreciated gives me great satisfaction and encourages me to continue empowering my profession.
[LTCW stakeholder]Step 1. Content IdentificationDesktop Research

We grouped questions and concerns about COVID-19, and COVID-19 vaccines and boosters into the following 5 general topics: access and process, benefits and efficacy, side effects and harm, development process, and the pandemic overall.

LTCW Stakeholder Consultation

We interviewed 9 LTCWs (5 certified nursing assistants, 1 food services worker, 1 activities director, 1 maintenance worker, and 1 other direct care worker) working in skilled nursing facilities, home care, and hospice care across various regions in the United States. The LTCWs interviewed included 5 females and 4 males. Four participants were White, 2 were Asian, 2 were Black, and 1 was biracial. All LTCWs indicated English as their preferred language, except for 1 who selected Cantonese. Interviews lasted approximately an hour and occurred over Zoom (Zoom Video Communications) between September 16 and November 5, 2021.

We found 3 major themes (; ).

Figure 1. Long-term care worker interview themes. LTCW: long-term care workers. View this figureTheme 1. LTCWs are Proud of Their Work and Yet Feel Undervalued

All interviewees expressed pride and unique vocational identity as LTCWs. They spoke impassionedly, with phrases like

Where my heart is.
[Participant #6]I don’t call it my passion, I don’t call it my calling; it’s my ministry.
[Participant #4]

A minority of participants noted frustration that LTCWs are generally unrecognized in favor of nursing or other health care workers.

LTCWs spontaneously cited their care for and connection to long-term care residents as central to their professional identities.

I love that it’s such a sense of family when we’re there.
[Participant #2]

This sense of responsibility was a powerful motivator for the LTCWs who decided to get COVID-19 vaccines.

In my line of work, I work with the demographic most at risk [so] I have a moral responsibility to other people.
[Participant #2]

The web of professional and emotional connections magnified the loss and trauma LTCWs experienced during the pandemic, with most noting death and illness among their residents, colleagues, families, and communities. One participant made the following statement:

Seeing these people that I work with – and I love – [...] in a very quick amount of time go from a healthy senior to gone was very devastating.
[Participant #2]

Another participant recounted their experience of near hospitalization due to COVID-19, which prompted them to get vaccinated.

Theme 2. LTCWs Have Varying Levels of Trust in Information About COVID-19, and COVID-19 Vaccines and Boosters

During the COVID-19 pandemic, LTCWs received information from various sources, including their employers, families and friends, the government, and news and social media. Participants were more likely to trust their families and friends about COVID-19, and its vaccines and boosters than other sources. Sometimes these influences resulted in vaccination, and other times they increased hesitancy. One participant made the following statement:

[My husband] is the one that is hesitant [about] the vaccine, and I am with him. He is the one that influenced me not to get it right now.
[Participant #3]

LTCWs noted their unique access to up-to-date information, citing the medical directors at their facilities and industry leaders as strong influences. Interviewees viewed most other mainstream information sources, including the government and the news media, as unreliable. One participant made the following statement:

I am not a scientist or a doctor. It’s very hard to find information that’s accurate.
[Participant #2]

In part because of their mixed information sources and partly due to the contradictory nature of official COVID-19 messages, LTCWs have outstanding questions about COVID-19 vaccines. One participant made the following statement:

Even the CDC and the FDA [...] still have different voices about the vaccine.
[Participant #6]

Another encapsulated LTCWs’ concerns with the following statement:

It’s [...] still a trial. They do not know 100% the consequences, the side effects, long-term side effects, [...] the ingredients.
[Participant #9]

Of particular concern were vaccine effectiveness, the vaccine development process, and potential harms, including long-term effects (fertility and unknown future problems) and serious reactions (myocarditis and blood clots). One participant recalled a colleague who made the following statement:

Her only reason was because she didn’t want to end up on a commercial 10 years from now that said, “Have you developed this, this, and this and this because of the [...] COVID vaccine that was forced on you 10 years ago? You may be liable for a lawsuit [sic]”
[Participant #7]Theme 3. LTCWs Would Welcome a Carefully Curated, Easy-to-Understand and Use COVID-19 Resource

Outstanding questions about COVID-19 and vaccines meant most LTCWs wanted a dedicated place where they could find trustworthy information.

Targeted at who you're trying to get
[Participant #4]

Knowing they could trust the information was critical.

Just not knowing how to find out, not knowing how to research, or not knowing how to look into the resources. I think it’s really important that be made easily and readily available to people.
[Participant #2]

LTCW participants said the best way to get curated and trustworthy information was through personal stories and plain clear communication. One participant made the following statement:

Having actual stories to all of this kind of stuff is going to probably be key. People need to connect with other people.
[Participant #5]

Clear simple communication is paramount, especially given the busy nature of LTCWs’ lives. One interviewee said they needed the following:

Solid information, but in a simpler way, like easy to understand.
[Participant #1]

Other participants preferred visual information.

I think pictures speak louder than words to a lot of people, especially with social media.
[Participant #7]Content Topics

Concerning the web application content itself, our LTCW interviewees appreciated the 5 proposed topics but suggested we eliminate the access and process topic. It was clear to LTCWs where and how they could get vaccinated. Additionally, they emphasized the importance of including content about COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness, the development process, and the potential short- and long-term risks. They also worked with us to refine the topic names for clarity (). Finally, our stakeholder partners expressed interest in light, non-COVID, LTCW-related topics, tapping into their professional identity.

Content Mix

When asked about the desired characteristics of the COVID-19 Social Site’s content, we found that the LTCW stakeholders wanted overall diversity in post format. Infographics and text-based content were most and least favored, respectively. The group strongly preferred content from Facebook and YouTube, with TikTok as the least preferred. They favored posts from certified nursing assistants, scientists, and laypeople and disfavored content from journalists. The LTCW stakeholders slightly preferred serious content over lighthearted content. Finally, they slightly preferred evergreen content to content covering new developments. Additional details are provided in .

National Online Panel Survey

A total of 592 participants comprised the final survey sample. Participant flow and characteristics are detailed in .

A large proportion of participants rated each information topic as at least “a little” important (; ). How effectively the vaccines protect people from the virus was most frequently the most important category among respondents. Participants least frequently selected vaccine benefits as the most important category. The other 4 categories were closely grouped. No new topics meaningfully different from the existing topics emerged from open-text responses with sufficient frequency to include. Additional results are provided in .

Table 1. Ranked importance of COVID-19 topics in a national online panel survey.Topic rankRatings of “a little important” or more per topic category (averaged across items)Topic category most frequently of top importance per respondent
CategoryPercentageCategoryPercentage1How well the vaccines work94%How well the vaccines work46%2Overall COVID-19 impact92%Overall COVID-19 impact37%3Vaccine benefits91%Vaccine creation35%4Vaccine creation90%Long-term vaccine problems34%5Short-term vaccine side effects89%Short-term vaccine side effects33%6Long-term vaccine problems89%Vaccine benefits24%Final Content

By launch, we had identified 434 content items for the web application, with 209 items ultimately uploaded to the live site (). Post characteristics varied (). Most posts (n=133) were videos, and the remainder were images (n=65) or text-based posts (n=11). The content came largely from Instagram (n=56), TikTok (n=54), and YouTube (n=51), with fewer posts from Facebook, Twitter, and Reddit.

Most posts (n=125) addressed the benefits of getting vaccinated, such as preventing death and illness. About a third (n=75) of the content covered COVID-19 as a disease and the severity of the pandemic. Other posts were about vaccine development (n=39) and the potential risks associated with vaccination (n=35), including side effects and heart problems. Some posts addressed multiple categories. Finally, a minority (n=25) of posts were not specifically related to these topic categories. These posts were largely health care workers’ personal stories, discussions of how vaccine misinformation works in general, or memes from certified nursing assistants or LTCWs.

We worked to reflect the LTCWs’ content mix preferences and the national survey result topics in our final content set, although some preferences competed, including the preference for video but suspicion of sources on TikTok. Given that the concerns about TikTok were related to its perceived untrustworthiness, we worked to rigorously fact-check each post to mitigate this concern.

Figure 2. Content identification, fact-checking, and screening flow diagram. View this figureTable 2. Final content characteristics.CharacteristicValue (N=209), n (%)Media type

Video133 (63.6)
Image65 (31.1)
Text11 (5.3)Media source

Instagram56 (26.8)
TikTok54 (25.8)
YouTube51 (24.4)
Facebook32 (15.3)
Twitter8 (3.8)
Reddit6 (2.9)
Other2 (1.0)Creator role

Medical expert87 (41.6)
Journalist27 (12.9)
Healthcare organization22 (10.5)
Government20 (9.6)
Layperson20 (9.6)
Long-term care worker or certified nursing assistant18 (8.6)
University or education organization14 (6.7)
Study team1 (0.5)Topicsa

Vaccine benefits125 (59.8)
About COVID-1975 (35.9)
Vaccine creation39 (18.7)
Vaccine risks35 (16.7)
General25 (12.0)

aIndividual content items may address multiple topics.

Step 2. Platform Development

We created a WordPress-based social media web application called the COVID-19 Social Site (). We specifically curated it for LTCWs. It featured an infinite scroll feed with information about each post (title, date, and source). LTCWs could sort posts by topic (level 1) or subtopic (level 2) via an expanding sidebar menu. They could also sort by specific hashtags (level 3).

Users could react to posts with emojis (labeled Like, Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, and Angry). They could also comment on posts and reply or react to other users’ comments. A notification bell alerted users to new activity, and we sent them email updates. We optimized the web application for desktop and mobile use. Interactivity was consistent with other popular social media web applications [].

Additionally, we tracked user interaction across the social web application using Google Analytics. We informed users of the data collection via cookies with a pop-up dialog box that appeared on their first visit to the site. These web analytics services allowed us to determine which topics or posts received the most views, measure overall user engagement, and troubleshoot navigational or technical issues.

Figure 3. COVID-19 Social Site login and home page. View this figureLTCW Stakeholder Consultation

LTCW stakeholder consultation participant characteristics are detailed in Step 1. The subthemes that emerged from our interviews with LTCWs related to platform development were that (1) the web application needed to be accessible and easy to use, and that (2) LTCWs should have a safe space to interact with each other, particularly through comments and likes.

Accessible and Easy to Use

Although the user habits and levels of digital literacy of the LTCWs and their peers varied, almost all interviewees wanted a clearly laid out web application with simple navigation. We reflected these preferences in the site’s final design, prioritizing ease of use.

A Safe Space for LTCWs to Connect

LTCWs wanted the web application to facilitate engagement with other LTCWs via comments. A few participants expressed concerns about the possibility of interpersonal conflict or vaccine-related misinformation but noted that careful moderation by the study team could mitigate this risk. The LTCWs also wanted to interact with posts and comments with likes, emojis, or similar. Multiple interviewees shared that while browsing established social media platforms like Facebook, they were most likely to view and actively engage with posts that had many reactions and comments.

UX Testing

We conducted 3 formal UX interviews with LTCWs and various informal UX tests with study team members and stakeholders [].

We found that users easily recognized the web application as a social media platform and understood the layout. All interviewees agreed that the language and topics featured were valuable. We uncovered various opportunities to decrease user pain points by improving the navigation experience. For instance, we added an instructional video and cues when hovering over the main navigation menus to encourage clicking. Additional details are provided in . We did not conduct repeat interviews.

Step 3. Community BuildingCommunity Standards and Moderation

Our final community standards ( included guidance about not giving or soliciting medical advice, and avoiding harassment, profanity, hate speech, and spamming. They also encouraged participants to maintain user privacy by not sharing information about others outside the web application.

Community Ambassadors

Given the emphasis on a safe space specifically for LTCWs, we decided LTCWs should play a visible role in the web application instead of the research staff, who were present behind the scenes but not visible. Through stakeholder connections, we recruited 3 students as “community ambassadors.” All 3 had long-term care experience and were training to become nursing home administrators.

The ambassadors were special users and community members, empowered by the study team. They used the site freely, commenting and reacting based on their views and positionality as LTCWs.

We asked the community ambassadors to report any comments of concern for individual review by moderators. This approach allowed the site to function as a partially self-moderating community, as regular users could also flag comments for review.

In addition to monitoring the site for community standard violations, we instructed the community ambassadors to encourage participant discussion by actively engaging with other users’ comments. We also asked the community ambassadors to respond to questions and concerns using information relating to COVID-19, the vaccines, and the boosters vetted by the study team ().

Additional details on the community standards and the community ambassadors are outlined in .


DiscussionPrincipal Findings

We successfully co-developed a novel social media web application featuring curated content specifically tailored to LTCWs with low vaccine confidence. LTCWs are a difficult-to-reach population who we were able to engage through participatory research and user-centered design. Although LTCWs report feeling overlooked professionally, they enthusiastically participated as partners in our project. Testing of the web application in a randomized trial is ongoing.

Through formative semistructured interviews, we found that LTCWs are proud of their work but feel undervalued, particularly in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. They often distrust official sources of information, including the government and popular media. Due to this combination of professional identity and distrust, they welcomed a social media platform specifically customized to them that is trustworthy and easy to understand and use.

To our knowledge, this is the first co-developed web application using curated content from social media to influence attitudes and behaviors about COVID-19 vaccines and boosters. It is also the first web application of its kind specifically for LTCWs, a critically important but understudied population.

Limitations

We developed the web application in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, a rapidly evolving and urgent public health crisis. Web application development, testing, and launch occurred on an expedited timeline. Under more favorable conditions, we would have conducted more extensive user testing before the trial launch.

A key limitation of our qualitative stakeholder work is that we conducted most of our formative interviews with LTCWs who were already engaged in the project and vaccinated. This sample may have affected the responses. Additionally, LTCWs who agreed to become partners in a vaccine confidence project may be meaningfully different from other LTCWs. While most of our stakeholders were vaccinated, they still had questions and concerns about COVID-19 vaccines and boosters.

Although we designed our national online panel survey to include individuals who were demographically representative of LTCWs, the information preferences of LTCWs may be inherently different from those of the survey participants. Additionally, our content mix poll included a small sample, limiting its representativeness.

Our social media web application, siloed in its own space online, is materially different from most other social media as it exists separately from the rest of the information ecosystem. This separation was necessary to isolate the effects of our intervention and prevent contamination in a larger randomized trial.

Comparison With Prior Work

Through our user-centered design and participatory research approach, our intervention evolved to reflect other successful interventions in this space more closely, namely a social media web application trialed by Glanz et al that improved vaccine uptake among children of participating parents []. This intervention featured vetted information from the study team and ways for participants to interact with each other and the researchers [].

Other research teams have successfully developed patient-facing communication interventions using participatory research methods []. Moderation of the intervention’s content by stakeholders is a participatory research approach we have never implemented before. Participatory research is promising and increasingly popular, and although evidence of efficacy or effectiveness is limited, the evidence base is growing [-]. We look forward to contributing to this body of knowledge with our randomized controlled trial results. While meaningful stakeholder engagement in all stages of the intervention development and project may be challenging in a condensed timeline, in the context of a pandemic, the benefits highlighted in the context of our study far outweighed the constraints.

Concerning the qualitative experiences of LTCWs overall, our findings that they feel underappreciated professionally are consistent with the findings in the literature, including research that has emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic []. Fisher et al memorably called LTCWs the “forgotten front line” []. Other researchers reported that LTCWs felt invisible and unsupported []. White et al noticed that although the media portrayed hospital staff as champions, negative media coverage of nursing homes was demoralizing []. We believe that our social web application and its co-development process demonstrate that LTCW perspectives truly matter and can shape the content, format, and moderation of a complex intervention designed to improve vaccine confidence among crucial health care workers.

Next Steps

It is not yet certain that the COVID-19 Social Site will positively influence vaccine confidence or uptake. The results of our randomized trial will be available in 2024.

If successful, our intervention could become a template for other populations with low COVID-19 vaccine confidence or uptake. Additionally, this approach could suit different contexts where changing attitudes or behaviors could be beneficial for public health. Our web application is a light-touch, low-cost intervention that may be relatively easy to replicate and implement by governments, employers, and others. Additionally, the resources associated with launching web applications such as these could be scaled up or down. Without the constraints of a randomized trial, we could also replicate elements of this approach using established social media platforms.

Conclusions

With user-centered design and participatory research, we developed a novel social media web application featuring curated internet content specifically for LTCWs.

Research reported in this manuscript was funded through a Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) Award (COVID-2021C2-13181). The statements presented in this manuscript are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the PCORI, or its Board of Governors or Methodology Committee. We acknowledge the broader CONFIDENT study team’s support and advice, particularly our long-term care worker partners. We thank the following collaborators: Feng Chen, Patrick Delva, Jon Edwards, Branden Fillbrook, Tammy McIlnay, Katie Page, Lupita Rodriguez, Rowena Sheppard, Mary White and Celeste Wooten.

Conceptualization: CHS, GS, GE, MC, and MAD. Methodology: CHS, GS, GE, and MAD. Software: CM and AJ. Formal analysis: CHS, AS, JP, JH, and MAD. Resources: GE and MAD. Data curation: AS. Writing-original draft: CHS and AS. Writing-review and editing: all authors. Supervision: LJ, GS, GE, and MAD. Funding acquisition: GE and MAD.

CHS holds copyright for the consideRATE suite of tools for serious illness. GE has edited and published books that provide royalties (Shared Decision Making, Oxford University Press and Groups, Radcliffe Press). GE’s academic interests are focused on shared decision making and coproduction. He owns copyright in measures of shared decision making (collaboRATE) and care integration (integRATE), a measure of experience of care in serious illness (consideRATE), a measure of goal setting coopeRATE, a measure of clinician willingness to do shared decision making (incorpoRATE), and observer measures of shared decision making (Observer OPTION-5 and Observer OPTION-12). He is the Founder and Director of &think LLC, which owns the registered trademark for Option Grid patient decision aids. He is the Chief Clinical Research Scientist to abridge AI Inc. MAD has contributed to the development of Option Grid patient decision aids, and EBSCO Information Services sells subscription access to Option Grid patient decision aids. She receives consulting income from EBSCO Health and royalties. All other authors report no relevant conflicts.

Edited by M Gisondi; submitted 31.03.22; peer-reviewed by J Polo; comments to author 13.07.22; revised version received 19.07.22; accepted 03.08.22; published 22.09.22

©Catherine H Saunders, Ailyn Sierpe, Gabrielle Stevens, Glyn Elwyn, Matthew Cantrell, Jaclyn Engel, Melissa Gonzalez, Martha Hayward, Joellen Huebner, Lisa Johnson, Alejandro Jimenez, Nancy Ruth Little, Corinne McKenna, Manu Onteeru, May Oo Khine, Jacqueline Pogue, José Luis Salinas Vargas, Peter Schmidt, Rachael Thomeer, CONFIDENT Study Long-Term Care Partners, Marie-Anne Durand. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 22.09.2022.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.

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