| Literature DB >> 28630034 |
Julian Hamm1, Arthur Money1, Anita Atwal2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the field of occupational therapy, the assistive equipment provision process (AEPP) is a prominent preventive strategy used to promote independent living and to identify and alleviate fall risk factors via the provision of assistive equipment within the home environment. Current practice involves the use of paper-based forms that include 2D measurement guidance diagrams that aim to communicate the precise points and dimensions that must be measured in order to make AEPP assessments. There are, however, issues such as "poor fit" of equipment due to inaccurate measurements taken and recorded, resulting in more than 50% of equipment installed within the home being abandoned by patients. This paper presents a novel 3D measurement aid prototype (3D-MAP) that provides enhanced measurement and assessment guidance to patients via the use of 3D visualization technologies.Entities:
Keywords: 3D visualization; assistive equipment provision process; extrinsic risk factors; falls; health informatics; measurement guidance; occupational therapy; self-assessment; technology-based systems
Year: 2017 PMID: 28630034 PMCID: PMC5495970 DOI: 10.2196/humanfactors.7161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Hum Factors ISSN: 2292-9495
Figure 12D paper-based measurement guidance form used within the AEPP in practice. AEPP: assistive equipment provision process.
Figure 2Overview of the procedure for the initial concept design phase.
Figure 3Concept sketches of a self-assessment tool designed by older adults during the participatory design sessions.
Figure 43D measurement aid prototype (3D-MAP) system architecture.
Figure 53D measurement aid prototype (3D-MAP) application (main menu).
Figure 63D toilet model screen.
Figure 7Rotation feature to manipulate 3D models to facilitate gaining a better understanding of the clinical guidance.
Figure 8Zoom in/out feature to manipulate 3D models to facilitate gaining a better understanding of the clinical guidance.
Figure 9Overview of the session, methods, and process.
Summary of participant profiles.
| Part. ID | Gender | Age in years; mean (SD), range | Occupation | Group number |
| #F1-#F8 | 2 Fa, Mb, 5 F | 66.2 (7.7), 52-75 | 6-retired, aircrew, flight manager, administration | 1 |
| #F9-#F14 | M, 2 F, 3 M | 75.2 (7.9), 65-86 | Retired | 2 |
| #F15-#F18 | M, F, M, F | 71.0 (3.7), 66-75 | Retired | 3 |
| #F19-#F27 | M, F, M, 2 F, M, 3 F | 70.6 (9.6), 54-89 | Retired | 4 |
| #F28-#F33 | 6 F | 76.2 (6.4), 68-87 | Retired | 5 |
aF: female.
bM: male.
Mean system usability scale (SUS) score and midpoint comparison.
| SUSa item | Midpoint | 3D-MAPb, mean (SD) | Gap score | Dfc | ||
| S1: I think that I would like to use this 3D-MAP application frequently. | 3.00 | 3.42 (1.062) | 0.42 | 32 | 2.30 | .03d |
| S2: I found the 3D-MAP application unnecessarily complex.e | 3.00 | 4.09 (0.879) | 1.09 | 32 | 7.13 | <.001d |
| S3: I thought the 3D-MAP application was easy to use. | 3.00 | 3.88 (1.083) | 0.88 | 32 | 4.66 | <.001d |
| S4: I think that I would need the support of a technical person to be able to use this 3D-MAP application.e | 3.00 | 3.91 (1.234) | 0.91 | 32 | 4.23 | <.001d |
| S5: I found the various functions in this 3D-MAP application were well integrated. | 3.00 | 3.94 (0.933) | 0.94 | 32 | 5.78 | <.001d |
| S6: I thought there was too much inconsistency in this 3D-MAP application.e | 3.00 | 4.19 (0.873) | 1.19 | 32 | 7.62 | <.001d |
| S7: I would imagine that most people would learn to use this 3D-MAP application very quickly. | 3.00 | 3.94 (1.435) | 0.94 | 32 | 3.76 | .001d |
| S8: I found the 3D-MAP application very awkward to use.e | 3.00 | 4.26 (0.682) | 1.26 | 32 | 10.28 | <.001d |
| S9: I felt very confident using the 3D-MAP app. | 3.00 | 3.82 (1.211) | 0.82 | 32 | 3.88 | <.001d |
| S10: I needed to learn a lot of things before I could get going with this 3D-MAP application.e | 3.00 | 4.39 (0.747) | 1.39 | 32 | 10.71 | <.001d |
aSUS: system usability scale.
b3D-MAP: 3D measurement aid prototype.
cDf: degrees of freedom.
dIndicates statistically significant ≥.05 confidence level.
eResponses of negative items were reversed to align with positive items, higher scores indicate positive responses.
Figure 10Thematic mind map of core themes and associated sub-themes.
Study outcomes.
| Areas of focus | Study outcomes | Source | |
| Confident using the application without assistance or supervision | S4, S9, S10 | ||
| Still some service user concerns about measuring furniture items independently | S3 | ||
| Valuable tool for self-assessment, patient involvement, and patient empowerment | SA, S1, PUa | ||
| Sharing furniture measurements with clinicians | AUb | ||
| Reduced time and resources overhead | SAc | ||
| Provides an improved ability to visualize and understand measurement guidance | S8, PU | ||
| Useful multimodal interaction features for clear measurement guidance | PU | ||
| Indicate exact areas to be measured on furniture items | PU | ||
| Provide usage instructions and short demo of key features | S4 | ||
| Develop improved 3D rotation function to improve visualization guidance | S4, PU, S3, S8 | ||
| Precise and unambiguous measurement arrow prompts for multiple measurements | S6, PEOUd | ||
| Brighter visual interface | AU | ||
| Provide context of the furniture items | SA | ||
| Visualize equipment installations in real-time in context of the home | PU | ||
| Provide smaller-sized numeric keyboard for measurement entry | AU | ||
aPU: perceived usefulness.
bAU: application use.
cSA: self-assessment.
dPEOU: perceived ease of use.