| Literature DB >> 15462682 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The delivery of technology-enhanced home care is growing in most industrialized countries. The objective of our study was to document, from the patient's perspective, how the level of user-friendliness of medical technology influences its integration into the private and social lives of patients. Understanding what makes a technology user-friendly should help improve the design of home care services.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15462682 PMCID: PMC526262 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-4-28
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1Technical and human dimensions that shape the user-friendliness of a technology (drawing on 12 and 13)
Description of the four interventions
| Used on a short-term basis to treat severe infections. The antibiotic drug can be delivered via a catheter in the patient's vein using different mechanical or electronic devices. Programmable pumps, which are battery-powered and can be carried in a shoulder bag, are seen as more reliable. Pumps are equipped with an alarm that warns of an occlusion, inadequate connection of tubes, or low battery. | |
| Used when oral nutrition is no longer feasible due to a disease (e.g. Crohn's disease, cancer of the digestive tract). Fluids and nutritive solutions are delivered via the patient's vein with the help of a programmable pump. A catheter is surgically inserted on a long-term basis. Patients are required to comply with very strict aseptic procedures. Patients generally use the device every day, and it may take up to 8 hours (overnight) to deliver the required amount of solution. | |
| An alternative to hospital-based hemodialysis that is designed to remove urea from the blood. It also involves the insertion of a permanent catheter, in this case through the peritoneal cavity, which requires compliance with aseptic procedures. A liquid is inserted in the peritoneal cavity and flushed out. Using an electronic device, patients can set automated exchanges to occur overnight, but when using a gravity system, patients have to manually perform 3 to 5 exchanges per day. | |
| Prescribed to patients with severe hypoxemia (due to pulmonary dysfunction). Oxygen is delivered by a fixed concentrator, via a 15-meter tube and nasal device. Patients normally use it up to 18 hours a day. Portable cylinders may be used for short periods (2–4 hours). A small oxygen-saving device allows oxygen to be delivered only when the patient is inspiring. | |
Details about interviewees
| 2 women | 38/80 | 24/1 | 1 woman | 67 | |
| 3 men | 65/65/68 | 2/1.5/1.5 | |||
| 5 women | 29/45/45/ | 120/24/36 | 1 woman | 72 | |
| 3 women | 48/62/82 | 96/24/36 | 1 man | 83 | |
| 3 men | 25/48/51 | 24/12/12 | 2 women | 35/45 | |
| Summary | 10 women + 6 men = 16 | 53.9 (25–81) | IV: 6 Others: 44.2 | 4 women + 2 men = 6 | 62 |
Technical and human factors that affect how patients use health technology at home
| Relatively few manipulations are required, but these may become problematic for older people lacking fine manual dexterity | Technical tasks are numerous and require dexterity | Technical tasks are simple (changing filters, connecting tubes to cylinders) | Technical tasks are numerous and require dexterity | |
| Anxiety is triggered by the possibility of the catheter becoming dislodged | Anxiety is triggered by the possibility of the catheter becoming dislodged | Anxiety is triggered by the dangers associated with getting too close to smokers or flames | Patients are struggling to control their health by balancing their dietary regimen and treatments | |
Technical and human factors that affect how patients use health technology in broader social life
| Portable systems may be heavy and limit mobility, while the gravity pole confines the patient to the home | Enables patients to be independent of the hospital and clinical staff | Patients are confined to a restricted space ("hooked up" to tubes) | The nocturnal automated exchange regulator enables a certain level of autonomy | |
| Professional and social life is slightly limited, albeit for a short period | Professional life is limited because of treatment frequency, the disease itself and the occasional-to-frequent re-hospitalisations | Professional life is limited because of the disease and being "hooked up" to the concentrator for up to 18 hours/day | Professional life is still possible (and is less restricted than for patients on hospital-based hemodialysis) | |