scholarly journals Digital health now and in the future: Findings from a participatory design stakeholder workshop

2017 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 205520761774001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deborah Lupton
Author(s):  
Bahar Khayamian Esfahani ◽  
Pooya Sareh

AbstractThe role of artificial intelligence (AI) in facilitating the real-time processing of data is revolutionising the future of healthcare through mobile diagnostics, remote monitoring devices, and wearable technology products. The rise in digital wearables for remote healthcare is evolving at an increasing pace towards patient-centred and personalised care with connected patients. This transformation is creating new opportunities for designers to increase patients' participation and sustain their engagement in remote healthcare. In this paper, the authors have investigated the role of gender in aesthetic design in the context of digital health wearables to enhance user engagement and interaction. The investigations were conducted through participatory design sessions and showed a constructive relationship between aesthetic preferences and understanding the influence of gender as a means of facilitating user engagement with digital health wearables. This paper presents a novel user response model that leads to suggestions for future work, including research in the areas of gender awareness in aesthetics to move beyond traditional, stereotypical, and pre-identified gendered characteristics related to femininity and masculinity. The findings conclude with a path forwards for design research to promote gender awareness in aesthetic design for the realisation of healthcare wearables of the future.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah M. Rodrigues ◽  
Anil Kanduri ◽  
Adeline M. Nyamathi ◽  
Nikil Dutt ◽  
Pramod P. Khargonekar ◽  
...  

AbstractDigital Health-Enabled Community-Centered Care (D-CCC) represents a pioneering vision for the future of community-centered care. Utilizing an artificial intelligence-enabled closed-loop digital health platform designed for, and with, community health workers, D-CCC enables timely and individualized delivery of interventions by community health workers to the communities they serve. D-CCC has the potential to transform the current landscape of manual, episodic and restricted community health worker-delivered care and services into an expanded, digitally interconnected and collaborative community-centered health and social care ecosystem which centers around a digitally empowered community health workforce of the future.


Author(s):  
Hardy Amy ◽  
Garety Philippa ◽  
Freeman Daniel ◽  
Kuipers Elizabeth ◽  
Harding Helen ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Holland ◽  
Stanislav Roudavski

This paper demonstrates how mobile games can contribute to participatory design and its aim of achieving positive change through the involvement of stakeholders. This overarching goal is considered via a particular case-study that utilizes a purpose-built smartphone game. The case-study applies this game to the design challenges of urban cycling. Utilisation of the game in a stakeholder workshop suggests that mobile play can aid understanding and help to establish communication amongst diverse participants. For further information and media, see https://osf.io/vy5dq/


Design Issues ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 42-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Virve Hyysalo ◽  
Sampsa Hyysalo

We address the design issue of mundane and strategic work in collaborative design. We do so through an examination of a series of participatory design activities in building a flagship library of the future. Both strategic and mundane work are found to permeate the processes, results, and further uptake of collaborative design outcomes as internal issues of user involvement, and not just as external context or excludable routine execution, which has been the prevailing view to them in design research to date.


Author(s):  
Jari Laarni ◽  
Iina Aaltonen

In the design of complex information systems and social practices for different domains a balance between theory-driven and practice-driven approaches is at best developed in a collaborative communication process between designers, researchers, and other actors. The authors have developed the Anticipation Design Dialogue method within the context of participatory design, which is based on dialogic communication between different stakeholders. A dialogic relationship between them takes place in future workshops in which experiences of different stakeholders are integrated in a way that makes it possible to illustrate the situation from different perspectives. The workshop participants develop in small groups a vision of the future state in which the situation is imagined from the future perspective by considering which kind of problems they have at the moment and by which way the problems could be managed in the future. Secondly, reflective thinking is promoted by letting each group at the time present their ideas while others are listening. The authors have found that the development of mutual understanding between different stakeholders in these kinds of workshops is a complex process that needs time, and therefore, an iterative series of workshops is recommended.


Author(s):  
Larissa Hjorth ◽  
Kana Ohashi ◽  
Jolynna Sinanan ◽  
Sarah Pink ◽  
Heather Horst ◽  
...  

In Chapter 8 we turn to Co-futuring Kinship—the ways in which past and present practices inform how the future of the kinship for care at a distance. This is particularly important for “super-aging” contexts like Japan in which one in three is of 80 years old. Chapter 8 sets the picture for discussion around digital health in which mobile media is fully imbricated in. Discussions around a “silver bullet” in the form of a mobile app still dominate despite the fact that there is much work into the need for social, rather than technological, solutions.


Author(s):  
Paul Cerrato ◽  
John Halamka
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Jani

Abstract The panellist Anant Jani will discuss about: What is the value of digital health? There is much hope and hype surrounding the potentially transformative effect that digital health tools can have in health and care systems but it is very difficult to ascertain the true value that digital health tools currently deliver or could deliver in the future. Compounding this uncertainty is the diverse, large and ever-changing digital health landscape - there are currently over 300,000 health and care apps on the market place in comparison to the less than 2000 drugs health and care systems normally have to deal with. In this session, we highlight how the quadruple value framework, recently endorsed by the EU Commission, can be used to help rationalize the digital health ecosystem by promoting the interventions that have the greatest potential to promote primary, secondary or tertiary prevention while optimising resource utilisation.


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