| Literature DB >> 30429638 |
Preethi Srinivas1, Victor Cornet2, Richard Holden1,2.
Abstract
Human factors and ergonomics (HFE) and related approaches can be used to enhance research and development of consumer-facing health IT systems, including technologies supporting the needs of people with chronic disease. We describe a multiphase HFE study of health IT supporting self-care of chronic heart failure by older adults. The study was based on HFE frameworks of "patient work" and incorporated the three broad phases of user-centered design: study or analysis; design; and evaluation. In the study phase, data from observations, interviews, surveys, and other methods were analyzed to identify gaps in and requirements for supporting heart failure self-care. The design phase applied findings from the study phase throughout an iterative process, culminating in the design of the Engage application, a product intended for continuous use over 30 days to stimulate self-care engagement, behavior, and knowledge. During the evaluation phase, we identified a variety of usability issues through expert heuristic evaluation and laboratory-based usability testing. We discuss the implications of our findings regarding heart failure self-care in older adults and the methodological challenges of rapid translational field research and development in this domain.Entities:
Keywords: Human factors/ergonomics; chronic heart failure; healthcare; mobile health (mHealth); user-centered design
Year: 2016 PMID: 30429638 PMCID: PMC6231419 DOI: 10.1080/10447318.2016.1265784
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hum Comput Interact ISSN: 1044-7318 Impact factor: 3.353