| Literature DB >> 30234092 |
Abstract
In the public health field, the design of interventions has long been considered to be the province of public health experts. In this paper, I explore an important complement to the traditional model: the design, prototyping, and implementation of innovative public health interventions by the public (users) themselves. These user interventions can then be incorporated by public health experts, who in turn design, support, and implement improvements and diffusion strategies as appropriate for the broader community. The context and support for this proposed new public health intervention development model builds upon user innovation theory, which has only recently begun to be applied to research and practice in medicine and provides a completely novel approach in the field of public health. User innovation is an assets-based model in which end users of a product, process, or service are the locus of innovation and often more likely than producers to develop the first prototypes of new approaches to problems facing them. This occurs because users often possess essential context-specific information about their needs paired with the motivation that comes from directly benefiting from any solutions they create. Product producers in a wide range of fields have, in turn, learned to profit from the strengths of these user innovators by supporting their grass-roots, leading-edge designs and field experiments in various ways. I explore the promise of integrating user-designed and prototyped health interventions into a new assets-based public health intervention development model. In this exploration, a wide range of lead user methods and positive deviance studies provide examples for identification of user innovation in populations, community platforms, and healthcare programs. I also propose action-oriented and assets-based next steps for user-centered public health research and practice to implement this new model. This approach will enable us to call upon the strengths of the communities we serve as we develop new methods and approaches to more efficiently and effectively intervene on the varied complex health problems they face.Entities:
Keywords: assets based models; community health promotion; intervention design; makerspace; online platform; positive deviance; user innovation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30234092 PMCID: PMC6131659 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2018.00248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Fraction and number of citizens developing household and medical solutions for their own use in six countries, amounting to almost 1 million patient innovators.
| Percentage of user innovators in population | 6.1% | 5.2% | 3.7% | 5.4% | 5.6% | 1.5% |
| Number user innovators | 2.9 million | 16 million | 4.7 million | 0.17 million | 1.6 million | 0.54 million |
| Percentage of user innovations with medical purposes | 2.0% | 7.9% | 2.4% | 7.0% | 8.0% | 5.5% |
| Number of medical user innovators | 58,000 | 384,000 | 371,300 | 11,900 | 128,000 | 29,700 |
N refers to total survey sample size in each country.
In all six surveys individuals under the age of 18 were excluded due to youth privacy considerations. Adults age 18 and older were included. No upper age limit was imposed except in the Finnish survey, which only included responses from adults ages 18–65.
(.
(.
(.
(.
(.
Diffusion effort across clusters of general value in Finland (N = 993).
| Cluster I: valuable to many | 23 | 19 |
| Cluster II: valuable to some | 21 | 6 |
| Cluster III: valuable to few | 12 | 0 |
de Jong et al. (.
Portuguese rare disease patients' solution sharing activities (N = 263).
| No effort devoted to sharing | 68 |
| Showed it to other patients | 28 |
| Showed it to medical professionals | 2 |
| Shared the info on a website/blog/social network | 8 |
| Shared it through media | 2.25 |
| Showed it to commercial entities | 1 |
| Spent time and/or money to help others (people, companies) use the solution | 1.5 |
| Made a manual or documentation that helps using the solution | 1 |
Oliveira et al. (.
Figure 1A model comparing the traditional “provider-centric” (Process A, yellow) and complementary “user-centric” (Process B, green) public health intervention development processes that have the potential to work together.