| Literature DB >> 30939848 |
Neil H Chadborn1, Krista Blair2, Helen Creswick3, Nancy Hughes4, Liz Dowthwaite5, Oluwafunmilade Adenekan6, Elvira Pérez Vallejos7,8,9.
Abstract
: Background: Technology-enabled healthcare or smart health has provided a wealth of products and services to enable older people to monitor and manage their own health conditions at home, thereby maintaining independence, whilst also reducing healthcare costs. However, despite the growing ubiquity of smart health, innovations are often technically driven, and the older user does not often have input into design. The purpose of the current study was to facilitate a debate about the positive and negative perceptions and attitudes towards digital health technologies.Entities:
Keywords: co-design; digital life-world; older people; smart cities; smart health
Year: 2019 PMID: 30939848 PMCID: PMC6627999 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare7020054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Table of topics and dilemmas discussed within the citizens’ juries.
| Topic | Issue or Dilemma |
|---|---|
| Smart health concept | Does the term smart health resonate or carry meaning? |
| Sharing of personal (medical) data | Ownership of data and continuity of care or risk of misuse? |
| Online systems to access health or social care | Convenient or barrier for some people? |
| Digital technology in the home | Reassurance for family member or invasion of privacy? |
| Barriers to access | Cost barrier of digital devices, lack of broadband internet connection? |
Figure 1Persona created as a way to tell a story about how an individual may be affected by digital technologies and how this may affect their health.
Self-reported characteristics and beliefs of participants.
| Total Participants ( | Jury A ( | Jury B ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Female | 44% ( | 64% ( |
| Male | 56% ( | 36% ( | |
| Age | Younger than 60 | 0 | 0 |
| 60–70 | 44% ( | 50% ( | |
| 70–80 | 44% ( | 36% ( | |
| Older than 80 | 2% ( | 14% ( | |
| Religion | No religion | 56% ( | 29% ( |
| Christian | 33% ( | 57% ( | |
| Unitarian | 11% ( | 0 | |
| Wiccan | 0 | 7% ( | |
| Prefer not to say | 0 | 7% ( | |
| Activity limitation | Very limited | 2% ( | 44% ( |
| Limited | 44% ( | 0 | |
| No | 33% ( | 50% ( | |
| Prefer not to say | 2% ( | 21% ( | |
| Health | Good | 22% ( | 57% ( |
| Fair | 88% ( | 36% ( | |
| Bad | 0 | 7% ( | |
| Ethnicity | White British | 100% ( | 72% ( |
| White Other | 0 | 7% ( | |
| Caribbean | 0 | 21% ( | |
Figure 2Post-session responses of all participants to the statements relating to issues raised in the juries. Differences between the groups were not significant for any of the statements.
Topics which emerged during workshops.
| Topic Number | Personal, Life-World | Strategic, Systems-World |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Control, privacy | Mis-trust about purpose of data collection, lack of control |
| 2 | Choice, access to information and personal efficacy | Standardisation, paternalistic |
| 3 | Continuity of care is benefit of information sharing | “Using data against you”, e.g., cross-checking between agencies |
| 4 | Monitoring for safety | Surveillance and utility of data, reaching into personal domain (e.g., mobile phone) |
| 5 | Ownership | Population collective data of public sector data |
| 6 | Experience of technology in older life | Lack of adjustments for older people |