| Literature DB >> 29091935 |
Alessandra N Bazzano1, Jane Martin2, Elaine Hicks3, Maille Faughnan1,3, Laura Murphy1,3.
Abstract
Health and wellbeing are determined by a number of complex, interrelated factors. The application of design thinking to questions around health may prove valuable and complement existing approaches. A number of public health projects utilizing human centered design (HCD), or design thinking, have recently emerged, but no synthesis of the literature around these exists. The results of a scoping review of current research on human centered design for health outcomes are presented. The review aimed to understand why and how HCD can be valuable in the contexts of health related research. Results identified pertinent literature as well as gaps in information on the use of HCD for public health research, design, implementation and evaluation. A variety of contexts were identified in which design has been used for health. Global health and design thinking have different underlying conceptual models and terminology, creating some inherent tensions, which could be overcome through clear communication and documentation in collaborative projects. The review concludes with lessons learned from the review on how future projects can better integrate design thinking with global health research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29091935 PMCID: PMC5665524 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Results of scoping review.
| Author/ | Participants/ | Use of HCD/DT | Health Outcomes | Methods/ | Results Reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chronically ill emerging adults (18–26 yrs old) in the US | Design thinking or human-centered design was utilized as the vehicle to discover unmet 'emerging adult' and adolescent health clinician needs. | Disease self-management skills and healthy lifestyle behaviors | Ethnography (observations, interviews), survey, literature review | Five design recommendations were suggested to ensure that the outpatient clinic supported both clinician and 'emerging adults' needs. | |
| School-going children 7–9 yrs old in Iran | User Centred Design was used to design a backpack that decreased load on shoulders, neck, waist. | Musculoskeletal disorders and pain, postural dysfunction | Ethnography (observation, interviews), focus groups, hidden filming, prototyping, brainstorming | UCD approach solved ergonomics approach for health considerations and addressed user preferences for aesthetics and appearance. | |
| People impacted by TB and HIV, those who care for them, and administrators or staff of a care organization in western Kenya | HCD was explicitly used to (1) understand the situation through the collection and analysis data; (2) develop a new clinical decision support system, (3) implement and evaluate the system across 24 clinics. | TB and HIV | Ethnography (site observations, key informant interviews), lab simulation, and in-context usability testing | HCD facilitated the process of digital innovation in a complex and resource-constrained context; improved understanding of the needs and assets of providers; created a TB clinical decision support system to improve intensive case-finding and IPT initiation among patients living with HIV, and implemented the system. | |
| Unmarried adolescent females in Tanzania and PSI staff and leadership who serve these clients | HCD processes used to identify new channels to provide contraceptive services. | Contraception for unmarried adolescent females | Design immersion, brainstorming, interviews, observation, prototyping with end users | Developed new channels for providing contraceptive information and services, plan to scale up HCD methods organization-wide. | |
| Children (aged under 18 yrs.) their families, medical informaticists, federally qualified health center (FQHC) staff, and researchers in the US | User-centred design used to build and test customized information technology tools to help FQHCs reach uninsured children and those at risk for losing coverage. | Children without health insurance and those at risk for losing health insurance coverage | Collected qualitative data (e.g., observation of clinic, family and staff interviews), research team spent approximately 95 hours directly observing 4 sites and conducted one-on-one interviews with 19 families and 31 FQHC staff members | Developed HIT tools to create “pop-up” alerts to remind health center staff to talk with patients about insurance status and upcoming deadlines for reapplication, and automate registries of children who are uninsured or nearing insurance expiration dates. | |
| Stakeholders in Nigeria involved in Ebola outbreak control, epidemiologists and designers | Design thinking was used to analyse experiences of Nigerian field workers and the Ebola Emergency Operations Center. | Ebola control | Design thinking workshops, development of personas, artefacts and process models related to ebola outbreak operations. | Developed software—the Surveillance and Outbreak Response Management System (SORMAS to ensure availability of validated real-time surveillance data and to manage the verification of cases as well as tracing and monitoring of their contacts as it is typically needed during an EVD and other disease outbreaks. | |
| Parents of overweight and obese female adolescents (aged under 18 yrs.) in the US | UCD application in a qualitative study that sought to determine parental views on how technology can support previously learned behaviors that require ongoing management and support beyond formal lifestyle interventions. | Overweight and obesity in adolescents | Collected qualitative data (14 interviews) with parents of overweight and obese female adolescents | Applications that teach adolescents how to cook were described as ideal for shared use between parents and adolescents because they are supportive of the role of the reciprocal causation for eating behaviors in the home. | |
| Mothers (≥18 yrs.) with young children in the US | UCD steps taken to develop and evaluate a workbook used as an educational tool outlining family health history based risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, breast cancer, and colorectal cancer. | Reduced risks of heart disease, diabetes, breast cancer and colorectal cancer that cluster in families | Collected qualitative data (interviews and focus groups) with mothers of young children with assessment and follow-up | ||
| Kaiser Permanente patients, staff, and administration in the US | Design Thinking is used by the Innovation Consultancy, a small team within the health care provider Kaiser Permanente, practicing an expansive, service-focused version of innovation that is both rapid and economical. | Care and management of Kaiser Permanente’s 8.6 million patients | Innovation lab uses ethnography, observation, deep dives, co-design. | KP Medrite project resulted in reduced costs associated with medication errors, greater employee satisfaction and patient peace of mind. Nurses Knowledge Exchange resulted in handover at the patient’s bedside rather than at the nurses’ station and introduced new software. Innovation Learning Network has been developed to share innovation beyond Kaiser Permanente with other healthcare organizations. | |
| Devices for Dignity Healthcare Technology Co-operative, users of health services, and stakeholders in the UK | UCD process brings together Industry, Academia and the NHS to design and develop innovative technology solutions to support people with long-term conditions. | Empathic approach with users who have long-term health conditions. Interviews and focus groups, prototyping, user testing and iteration, co-design and surveys | |||
| Adults (18 yrs. and older) with asthma and practice nurses involved in asthma management in Scotland | Multifaceted processing incorporating a UCD process for development of online intervention for asthma self-management. | Asthma self-management | Focus groups and think aloud study, prototyping | Online internet intervention for behavior change and self-management of asthma developed and will undergo evaluation in a randomized controlled trial. | |
| Collaborative academia-industry partnership of researchers, product designers, engineers, and dietitians in the US | IDEAS framework guided the process and was used for its integration of behavioral theory, User-Centered Design and Design Thinking, and evaluation. | Dietary self-monitoring for improved nutrition | Qualitative interviews, ideation, prototyping, user testing | Pilot RCT findings suggested the initial efficacy, acceptance, and feasibility of the intervention. The final version of Vegethon enabled easy self-monitoring of vegetable consumption and included a range of features designed to engage participants. | |
| Adults with osteoarthritis (age range 45–65 years) in England | UCD approach adopted to develop a rehabilitation tool for patients with osteoarthritis. | Osteoarthritis rehabilitation | Focus groups, prototyping | Identified determinants of user acceptance of a wearable technology and reported patient preferences and information derived from the research. | |
| Spanish-speaking Latina women in Nebraska, US | Design thinking was used to create a health education specifically designed for monolingual Spanish-speaking immigrant Latinas in Nebraska. | Health education for immigrant Latina women | Co-creation, co-design, dialogue, prototyping, brainstorming | Increase in women’s health knowledge based on data from pre-test and post-test surveys. | |
| People with dementia and their carers in the UK | UCD/Participatory design used to create acceptable and effective prototype technologies to facilitate independence for people with dementia | Dementia care | Focus groups, workshops, prototyping | Prototypes for two devices (armband and electronic notepad) were developed. The study showed that involving people with dementia in the process of participatory design is feasible and could lead to devices which are more acceptable and relevant to their needs. | |
| Young adolescents in Indiana, US | Designers trained in UCD developed relevant and informative communication materials to raise awareness about adolescent health issues. | Adolescent health issues | Focus groups | Prototyping and final development of public service announcements (PSAs] and a health survival booklet. | |
| Health care workers in Switzerland | UCD approach incorporating strategies of human factors engineering, cognitive behaviour science and elements of social marketing, followed by an iterative prototype test phase within the target population. | Hand hygiene / disease transmission | Prototyping | Presented the results of the work (“My 5 moments for hand hygiene concept”] but no specific details reported on the process used. | |
| Students of the School of Design Thinking in Potsdam, Germany and staff of The Vienna Vaccine Safety Initiative | Vaccine safety | Field research, including interviews with international experts, parents, pediatricians, and children, generation of representative Personas, Prototyping | Developed VAccApp™, a digital vaccination record helping parents keep track of recommended immunizations for their children while integrating vaccine recommendations and reminders for booster immunizations into every-day life. The app was in beta testing at the time of the publication. | ||
| Professional stakeholders involved in care of bed-ridden nursing home residents in the Netherlands | Participatory action research and UCD with stakeholders (not residents of nursing homes themselves) to provide design guidance on improving the care environment for bed-ridden nursing home residents. | Mobility and activities of daily living of nursing home residents confined to bed | |||
| 14 community/public health professionals in Oakland, US | 12-week pilot in which professionals from nine organizations used the HCD process to develop concepts for stimulating a vibrant local economy in the Oakland Best Babies Zone. | Infant mortality and community level health. | Design sprint, semi-structured interviews, prototyping | Informed the design of a Community Market (hosted a total of 20 vendors, generated US $3,212.60 in profit for vendors, and attracted 585 attendees) and led to creation of the East Oakland Innovators program. | |
| Community members in Kisumu, Kenya (household members, teachers, health care workers) | Interactive and iterative design used to develop convenient and economical hand washing system. | Water and sanitation, hand washing | Focus groups, interviews, prototyping | In focus group discussions, approximately 80% of participants stated they would purchase a “Povu Poa” product, suggesting the aspirational value of the product. Final development of the model was reported to be taking place in the future (at the time of publication). |
Health applications of human centred design.
| Health context | Example |
|---|---|
| Disease self-management for chronically ill young adults | |
| Reducing familial risk of heart disease, T2D, cancer | |
| Management of renal disease, assistive rehabilitation, urinary continence | |
| Asthma self-management | |
| Osteoarthritis rehabilitation | |
| Dementia care | |
| Mobility and ADLs of nursing home residents | |
| Children without health insurance, Kaiser Permanente managed care | |
| TB and HIV patients and carers | |
| Control and prevention of Ebola transmission | |
| Hand hygiene of health care workers | |
| Water Sanitation Hand Hygiene | |
| Vaccine Safety | |
| Dietary self-monitoring | |
| Obesity/overweight in adolescents | |
| Health education for Spanish speaking immigrant women | |
| Infant mortality (Best Babies Zone) | |
| Preventing musculoskeletal disorders and pain in children | |
| Adolescent health issues | |
| Contraception |