Translating Viewpoints on Health Management into Actionable Practices
Background: I joined this project after the phase of understanding users was almost completed. I was tasked to design and implement prototypes to tackle the user challenges identified by a senior PhD student, Liz Kaziunas. Under the mentorship of Dr. Mark Ackerman, I went through several iterations of design and development, including low-fi paper sketches, an Android app as the proof of concept, and a web application as the final product. I led a preliminary study to gather feedback about our design.
This was an interesting and equally challenging project where I experienced vividly the culture differences between Taiwan and the U.S., specifically in terms of health management attitudes toward different approaches. While Chinese medicine and Western medicine were practiced and appreciated by many people in Taiwan, Western medicine was rather dominant for my U.S. participants. I have received some relatively strong opinions from U.S. participants, which showed that further exploration was needed.
My role(s): Researcher, Designer, Developer
Collaborator(s): Dr. Liz Kaziunas, Shuang Liu, Dr. Mark S. Ackerman
Motivation: Following health professionals' instructions to manage a chronic condition (i.e, diabetes), such as "eating healthy food" and "doing more exercise" could be challenging. Patients might need resources to figure out how to realistically implement such instructions in their community with its unique environment. For instance, there might be no grocery store in the vicinity that provides healthy food options.
Problem Solving: Based on our prior study that recognized the need for translation to convert high-level instructions into realistic and localized strategies (e.g., finding a commute option to a grocery store that offers healthy food options), I designed and evaluted a video-based tool that showcases how other patients with a similar condition develop their viewpoints and approaches to manage chronic conditions.
Prior Research Finings
Lo-Fi
Hi-Fi
Usability Testing
6 participants
Re-design
Outcomes:
Preliminary user study with 6 participants, who were patients or had a patient in the family, showed
- Seeing different viewpoints is valuable: participants valued seeing different viewpoints and approaches to managing diabetes.
- Facilitate understanding family's viewpoints: the application helped participants to better understand the viewpoints held by their family members and their approaches to managing diabetes.
- Prior experience might dominate: experience, particularly a negative one, could strongly influence how a participant perceives specific viewpoints (e.g., Chinese medicine).
The outcomes of this project include a scholarly publication (link) and a mobile web prototype that allows patients to explore curated Youtube videos where patients and clinicians with different viewpoints share their practices of managing diabetes.
Summary:
Date: 2014 ~ 2016
Research & Design Strategy
Apply Iterative Design Process to Improve a Prorotype based on Prior Work
Managing health with chronic condition(s) presents challenges for individuals who have to manage various aspects of their lives according to the conditions and how their body reacts. This continuous process is likely to involve interaction with family members, neighbors, community health workers, and health professionals, who contribute their knowledge and viewpoints to help the individuals navigate through all the challenges. While having various sources of support from the social network seems beneficial, individuals with chronic conditions also have to make sense of the different and sometimes contradicting pieces of knowledge from people with different viewpoints.
Based on previous work, we come to understand that these different viewpoints are the building blocks of how individuals learn to manage lives. With this understanding, we apply iterative design to explore how we could design a video-based mobile platform for people to easily present and understand various viewpoints for managing chronic conditions such as Diabetes.