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Design thinking for mHealth application co-design to support heart failure self-management

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 15:04 authored by Leanna Woods, Elizabeth Cummings, Jeremy DuffJeremy Duff, Kim Walker
Heart failure is a prevalent, progressive chronic disease costing in excess of $1billion per year in Australia alone. Disease self-management has positive implications for the patient and decreases healthcare usage. However, adherence to recommended guidelines is challenging and existing literature reports sub-optimal adherence. mHealth applications in chronic disease education have the potential to facilitate patient enablement for disease self-management. To the best of our knowledge no heart failure self-management application is available for safe use by our patients. In this paper, we present the process established to co-design a mHealth application in support of heart-failure self-management. For this development, an interdisciplinary team systematically proceeds through the phases of Stanford University's Design Thinking process; empathise, define, ideate, prototype and test with a user-centred philosophy. Using this clinician-led heart failure app research as a case study, we describe a sequence of procedures to engage with local patients, carers, software developers, eHealth experts and clinical colleagues to foster rigorously developed and locally relevant patientfacing mHealth solutions. Importantly, patients are engaged in each stage with ethnographic interviews, a series of workshops and multiple re-design iterations.

History

Source title

Context Sensitive Health Informatics: Redesigning Healthcare Work [presented in Studies in Health Technology and Informatics, Vol. 241]

Name of conference

International Conference on “Context Sensitive Health Informatics, Human and Socio-Technical approaches” (CSHI2017)

Location

Hong Kong

Start date

2017-08-01

End date

2017-08-05

Pagination

97-102

Editors

Nøhr, C., Kuziemsky, C. E. & Wong, Z. S-Y.

Publisher

IOS Press

Place published

Amsterdam, Netherlands

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Nursing and Midwifery

Rights statement

© 2017 The authors and IOS Press. This article is published online with Open Access by IOS Press and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC 4.0).

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