| Literature DB >> 26307048 |
Arthur G Money1, Anita Atwal2, Katherine L Young2, Yasmin Day2, Lesley Wilson2, Kevin G Money3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the UK occupational therapy pre-discharge home visits are routinely carried out as a means of facilitating safe transfer from the hospital to home. Whilst they are an integral part of practice, there is little evidence to demonstrate they have a positive outcome on the discharge process. Current issues for patients are around the speed of home visits and the lack of shared decision making in the process, resulting in less than 50 % of the specialist equipment installed actually being used by patients on follow-up. To improve practice there is an urgent need to examine other ways of conducting home visits to facilitate safe discharge. We believe that Computerised 3D Interior Design Applications (CIDAs) could be a means to support more efficient, effective and collaborative practice. A previous study explored practitioners perceptions of using CIDAs; however it is important to ascertain older adult's views about the usability of technology and to compare findings. This study explores the perceptions of community dwelling older adults with regards to adopting and using CIDAs as an assistive tool for the home adaptations process.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26307048 PMCID: PMC4549877 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-015-0190-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1Overview of trials methods and process
Summary of community dwelling older adult profiles
| Participant | Gender | Age | Occupation |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Male | 66–70 | Software developer |
| B | Female | 56–60 | Teacher |
| C | Female | 66–70 | Personal assistant |
| D | Male | 76–80 | Engineer |
| E | Male | 66–70 | Market researcher |
| F | Male | 71–75 | Administrator |
| G | Male | 61–65 | Financial adviser |
| H | Female | 66–70 | NHS Manager |
| I | Female | 66–70 | Teacher |
| J | Female | 66–70 | Analyst |
Fig. 2The SweetHome 3D application interface
Written instructions for interaction task with SweetHome 3D
|
|
| 1. Create a room with four walls, one door and one window and a floor. |
| 2. Add a bathtub, followed by a bath board to the room (the bath board is to sit across the bath width ways). |
| 3. Add a toilet, followed by a toilet frame to the room (the toilet frame is to sit around the toilet). |
| 4. Finally, add a shower, followed by a shower chair to the room (the shower chair is to sit inside the shower tray). |
Note: Dimensions and location of items within the room are entirely your choice
Fig. 3Thematic mind map of themes and sub-themes
Study outcomes
| Theme | Sub-theme | Study outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| PU | Collaboration & decision making | • Clear and understandable 3D home representations |
| • Valuable tool for joint decision making and collaboration | ||
| • Empower patients to have influence on decisions | ||
| • Increase awareness and understanding of the design options | ||
| Educational value | • Function of specialist OT equipment not intuitive | |
| • Potential of learning equipment function from using CIDA | ||
| PEOU | Interface considerations | • Increase size of icons |
| • Provide textual descriptors | ||
| • Revise folder structure/location of OT equipment | ||
| Size & scale | • Accuracy of measurements | |
| Dexterity & motor skills | • Redesign interface/functions to require less dexterity/motor skills | |
| AU | Assisted use | • More suitable to be used alongside an expert user/practitioner |
| Existing applications | • Confidence in value and applicability | |
| • Familiarity with CIDA in existing real-world contexts |