Abstract
Technology-based interventions in the field of disability and rehabilitation, which serve assistive, therapeutic, and/or service delivery functions, are considered complex due to the skills required of providers and recipients, degree of individual tailoring, and diversity of use settings. Feasibility studies are an important step in the evolution of complex interventions that can help refine the intervention, inform implementation, and prevent wasted resources. However, guidance is lacking regarding specific considerations for feasibility studies of technology-based interventions in disability and rehabilitation, which leaves researchers and developers reliant on resources from other fields that do not address important technology properties. To advance the field, context-specific definitions, considerations, and evaluation dimensions must be explicitly outlined to ensure that feasibility studies are constructively designed to meet the unique needs of these interventions. In this viewpoint article, we (1) propose a definition and framework for feasibility studies within the specific context of technology-based disability and rehabilitation interventions, (2) highlight important and unique imperatives for feasibility studies of these interventions, and (3) articulate relevant feasibility dimensions and associated evaluation criteria for these interventions. Building on previous work, we distinguish between feasibility studies, wherein we focus on iterative intervention refinement by addressing key development questions (eg, usability), and pilot studies, which are small-scale versions of a larger study that will evaluate intervention outcomes. Integrating previous typologies, we present 13 feasibility dimensions relevant to technology-based interventions and provide sample evaluation criteria, focusing on the intervention itself rather than study design considerations (eg, trial management). This information may be useful for research and development communities (academic, clinical, or industry) to inform comprehensive feasibility studies that examine unique aspects of technology-based interventions to promote real-world impact. This contribution encourages greater harmonization of terminology and evaluation methods to streamline interpretation and comparison across studies.