Background: Effective pain management is a cornerstone of cancer palliative care, yet it remains challenging in low- and middle-income countries due to limited resources, regulatory constraints, and a lack of objective tools. While wearable technologies offer promise for augmenting pain-related patient-reported outcomes with physiological data, their usability in palliative settings in low- and middle-income countries is underexplored. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the technology usability and implementation feasibility of the NEST (Non-intrusive Devices for Telemedicine) system, a low-cost, smartwatch-based pain monitoring solution for palliative cancer care co-designed with health care staff from a cancer hospital in Ecuador. Methods: An observational usability study was conducted with 7 patients with cancer receiving palliative care treatment, combining hospital- and home-based monitoring phases. We used a qualitative and quantitative approach to assess the usability of the NEST system and to identify sociotechnical factors affecting feasibility using the NASSS (Nonadoption, Abandonment, Scale-up, Spread, and Sustainability) framework. Results: Quantitative results showed a strong preference for the smartwatch over the mobile phone for submitting patient-reported outcomes (246/296, 83\%), with wear-time adherence of the smartwatch ranging from 36\% to 92\% of the time. Qualitative feedback from patients and health care staff indicated good usability and perceived clinical value, though technical and organizational challenges, such as charging habits, training needs, and dashboard integration into the daily workflow of health care staff, were noted. As for feasibility, most of the complexity was found in the dynamics of the health condition, while the technology shows clear promising signs of having value to patients and health care staff. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the commonly reported usability hurdles of a smartwatch-based sociotechnical health solution are surmountable given fluid communication between stakeholders during all stages of design and deployment. The primary threats to feasibility in our context seem to lie in the highly complex and dynamic environment of palliative cancer care, regulatory ambiguity regarding the use of medical devices, and the workload burden on health care staff.
Dominguez, F, Heras, J, Benjumea, J, Vallejo, M, Parra, E, Fiallos, W, Villao, A, PazmiƱo, F, Stiens, J & da Silva, B 2026, 'Evaluating a Wearable-Based Pain Monitoring System in Palliative Cancer Care: Usability and Feasibility Study', JMIR formative research, vol. 10, e78098. https://doi.org/10.2196/78098
Dominguez, F., Heras, J., Benjumea, J., Vallejo, M., Parra, E., Fiallos, W., Villao, A., PazmiƱo, F., Stiens, J., & da Silva, B. (2026). Evaluating a Wearable-Based Pain Monitoring System in Palliative Cancer Care: Usability and Feasibility Study. JMIR formative research, 10, Article e78098. https://doi.org/10.2196/78098
@article{33bf4e166524449499aba9eb3aa09bce,
title = "Evaluating a Wearable-Based Pain Monitoring System in Palliative Cancer Care: Usability and Feasibility Study",
abstract = "Background: Effective pain management is a cornerstone of cancer palliative care, yet it remains challenging in low- and middle-income countries due to limited resources, regulatory constraints, and a lack of objective tools. While wearable technologies offer promise for augmenting pain-related patient-reported outcomes with physiological data, their usability in palliative settings in low- and middle-income countries is underexplored. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the technology usability and implementation feasibility of the NEST (Non-intrusive Devices for Telemedicine) system, a low-cost, smartwatch-based pain monitoring solution for palliative cancer care co-designed with health care staff from a cancer hospital in Ecuador. Methods: An observational usability study was conducted with 7 patients with cancer receiving palliative care treatment, combining hospital- and home-based monitoring phases. We used a qualitative and quantitative approach to assess the usability of the NEST system and to identify sociotechnical factors affecting feasibility using the NASSS (Nonadoption, Abandonment, Scale-up, Spread, and Sustainability) framework. Results: Quantitative results showed a strong preference for the smartwatch over the mobile phone for submitting patient-reported outcomes (246/296, 83\%), with wear-time adherence of the smartwatch ranging from 36\% to 92\% of the time. Qualitative feedback from patients and health care staff indicated good usability and perceived clinical value, though technical and organizational challenges, such as charging habits, training needs, and dashboard integration into the daily workflow of health care staff, were noted. As for feasibility, most of the complexity was found in the dynamics of the health condition, while the technology shows clear promising signs of having value to patients and health care staff. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the commonly reported usability hurdles of a smartwatch-based sociotechnical health solution are surmountable given fluid communication between stakeholders during all stages of design and deployment. The primary threats to feasibility in our context seem to lie in the highly complex and dynamic environment of palliative cancer care, regulatory ambiguity regarding the use of medical devices, and the workload burden on health care staff.",
author = "Federico Dominguez and Jacqueline Heras and Jhonston Benjumea and Marina Vallejo and Ericka Parra and Wagneer Fiallos and Andrea Villao and Fabricio Pazmi{\~n}o and Johan Stiens and \{da Silva\}, Bruno",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Federico Dom{\'i}nguez, Jacqueline Heras, Jhonston Benjumea, Mariana Vallejo, Ericka Parra, Wagner Fiallos, Andrea Villao, Fabricio Pazmi{\~n}o, Johan Stiens, Bruno da Silva.",
year = "2026",
month = feb,
day = "6",
doi = "10.2196/78098",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "JMIR formative research",
issn = "2561-326X",
publisher = "JMIR Publications",
}