@Article{info:doi/10.2196/37474, author="Proctor, Steven L and Rigg, Khary K and Tien, Allen Y", title="Acceptability and Usability of a Reward-Based Mobile App for Opioid Treatment Settings: Mixed Methods Pilot Study", journal="JMIR Form Res", year="2022", month="Oct", day="5", volume="6", number="10", pages="e37474", keywords="opioids; contingency management; mHealth; digital health; mobile app; innovation; opioid use disorder; recovery; acceptability", abstract="Background: Contingency management is an evidence-based yet underutilized approach for opioid use disorder (OUD). Reasons for limited adoption in real-world practice include ethical, moral, and philosophical concerns regarding use of monetary incentives, and lack of technological innovation. In light of surging opioid overdose deaths, there is a need for development of technology-enabled solutions leveraging the power of contingency management in a way that is viewed by both patients and providers as acceptable and feasible. Objective: This mixed methods pilot study sought to determine the perceived acceptability and usability of PROCare Recovery, a reward-based, technology-enabled recovery monitoring smartphone app designed to automate contingency management by immediately delivering micropayments to patients for achieving recovery goals via smart debit card with blocking capabilities. Methods: Participants included patients receiving buprenorphine for OUD (n=10) and licensed prescribers (n=5). Qualitative interviews were conducted by 2 PhD-level researchers via video conferencing to explore a priori hypotheses. Thematic analysis of interviews was conducted and synthesized into major themes. Results: Participants were overwhelmingly in favor of microrewards (eg, US {\$}1) to incentivize treatment participation (up to US {\$}150 monthly). Participants reported high acceptability of the planned debit card spending restrictions (blocking cash withdrawals and purchases at bars or liquor stores, casinos or online gambling). Quantitative data revealed a high level of perceived usability of the PROCare Recovery app. Conclusions: Patients and providers alike appear receptive to microfinancial incentives in standard OUD treatment practices. Further pilot testing of PROCare is underway to determine acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness in a rigorous randomized controlled trial. ", issn="2561-326X", doi="10.2196/37474", url="https://formative.jmir.org/2022/10/e37474", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/37474", url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36197705" }