| Literature DB >> 21333000 |
Blaine Reeder, Rebecca A Hills, George Demiris, Debra Revere, Jamie Pina.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since it was first defined in 1995, Public Health Informatics (PHI) has become a recognized discipline, with a research agenda, defined domain-specific competencies and a specialized corpus of technical knowledge. Information systems form a cornerstone of PHI research and implementation, representing significant progress for the nascent field. However, PHI does not advocate or incorporate standard, domain-appropriate design methods for implementing public health information systems. Reusable design is generalized design advice that can be reused in a range of similar contexts. We propose that PHI create and reuse information design knowledge by taking a systems approach that incorporates design methods from the disciplines of Human-Computer Interaction, Interaction Design and other related disciplines. DISCUSSION: Although PHI operates in a domain with unique characteristics, many design problems in public health correspond to classic design problems, suggesting that existing design methods and solution approaches are applicable to the design of public health information systems. Among the numerous methodological frameworks used in other disciplines, we identify scenario-based design and participatory design as two widely-employed methodologies that are appropriate for adoption as PHI standards. We make the case that these methods show promise to create reusable design knowledge in PHI.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21333000 PMCID: PMC3053242 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Design problems and solutions in the public health context
| Design Problem | Example Design Problem in the Public Health Context | Reusable Design Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Few formal needs assessment studies[ | Needs assessments conducted in coordination with participatory design to clarify problems by learning from their users, users' goals and users' data needs[ | |
| Need to understand the work practices of public health practitioners[ | Participatory design[ | |
| Public health systems are designed and deployed without complete knowledge of the working environment system[ | Create a representation of an intentional future[ | |
| Limited resources mean not all system requirements can be met | Documented design knowledge that allows for comparisons between competing solutions | |
| Balancing competing characteristics such as sensitivity and false negatives[ | ||
| Diverse work and diverse information systems[ | Participatory design that includes a mixture of representative public health work roles and teams | |
| Create scenarios that include a mixture of representative public health work roles and teams | ||
| Data produced by public health systems is used for different purposes by a diverse set of individuals | Use scenario-based design to describe the tasks and activities necessary to deliver essential services | |
| Health practitioners have complex roles and workflows[ |