| Literature DB >> 30947748 |
Jacqueline E McLaughlin1,2, Michael D Wolcott3,4,5, Devin Hubbard6, Kelly Umstead7, Traci R Rider7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Design thinking is a problem-solving framework that has been used to enhance patient experiences, improve clinical outcomes, and refine medical curricula. This study reviewed the use of design thinking in health professions education.Entities:
Keywords: Creativity; Curriculum development; Design thinking; Innovation; Problem solving
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30947748 PMCID: PMC6449899 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-019-1528-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Fig. 1Article Review Flow Diagram
Description of articles included in the final review examining the use of design thinking in health professions education
| Publication date | Program/Aim | Disciplines Included | Study Location | Participants | DT Model Used | Outcome(s) Described | Examples of Benefits of DT Identified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Educate intensivists to use design thinking to marshal support for adopting technology | Medicine | United States | Practitioners, administrators | Brown (3-stage) | Acquisition of technology solutions | Understanding user needs; iterative prototyping to refine approach and decision making |
| 2014 | Teach design thinking to inpatient spinal cord injury patients using a series of 4 to 5 workshops | Medicine | United Kingdom | Patients | Brown (3-stage) | Patient self-efficacy and perceptions, PMnac, ADAPSS, PAM, EQ-5D, HRQL, length of stay, readmission rate | Improved outcomes; interdisciplinary collaboration; flexibility to improve and align program with context |
| 2016 | Conduct a 2-day competitive interdisciplinary team event (i.e. “hackathon”) | Medicine, engineering, design, business | United States | Students, practitioners, scientists, engineers | Not Defined | Demographics | Interdisciplinary collaboration |
| 2016 | Design a 2-day seminar aimed at generating interprofessional education (IPE) evaluation strategies | Medicine, nursing, pharmacy, physician assistant | United States | Practitioners | Modified (5-stage) | Model for evaluating IPE | Flexible process |
| 2016 | Design and implement a semester-long “Hacking Healthcare” course | Medicine, social sciences, and art | Netherlands | Students | Brown (3-stage) | Student project solutions; student perceptions | Activating environment; interdisciplinary collaboration; empathetic “design min-set” |
| 2017 | Investigate camp designed to provide hands-on experience in creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship | Physiotherapy, occupational therapy, radiography, nursing, and midwifery | Denmark | Students | Brown (3-stage) | Perceived relevance of camp, format, and effort | Interdisciplinary cooperation; real-world/relevant problems; active learning environment |
| 2017 | Characterize innovation and entrepreneurship programs in US medical education | Medicine | United States | Program Directors | Not Defined | Characteristics of innovation and entrepreneurship programs | Advancing readiness for complex problems; user-centric; active; interdisciplinary |
DT = Design Thinking