Learning When to Intervene on Habitual Behaviors: A Case Study in Oral Health Care

Abstract

A central challenge for digital health interventions aimed at improving habitual behaviors is deciding when to deliver an intervention prompt. For many daily habits, such as tooth brushing or eating, individuals tend to act around a usual time of day, but this timing is not fixed and can shift as routines evolve. When intervention timing is selected in advance and held constant throughout a study, it can gradually become misaligned with behavior, causing interventions to potentially arrive after the behavior has already occurred or too early to be effective. In this work, we address this habitual timing misalignment in digital health interventions by proposing an online decision-making framework that continuously adapts intervention timing as individual behavior patterns change. Rather than treating intervention timing as a static design choice, our framework adapts it over time and integrates it into a sequential process that determines both when and whether to deliver an intervention. Using data from a deployed oral health intervention trial as a case study, we evaluate our approach using both observed data and simulated settings to assess how well different intervention timing strategies align with the timing of brushing events. Across these evaluations, we measure performance using a coverage-based metric that captures whether an intervention is delivered sufficiently close to a subsequent brushing event. We find that adaptive intervention timing consistently improves coverage compared to fixed intervention times based on user-provided input. The proposed framework is currently deployed in an ongoing randomized controlled trial of a digital oral health intervention, with preliminary results that are consistent with and further support our prior evaluations.

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