Gray Kathleen Mary, Clarke Ken, Alzougool Basil, Hines Carolyn, Tidhar Gil, Frukhtman Feodor
JMIR Res Protoc. 2014 Mar 10;3(1):e13. doi: 10.2196/resprot.3201.
The use of Internet protocol television (IPTV) as a channel for consumer health information is a relatively under-explored area of medical Internet research. IPTV may afford new opportunities for health care service providers to provide health information and for consumers, patients, and caretakers to access health information. The technologies of Web 2.0 add a new and even less explored dimension to IPTV's potential.
Our research explored an application of Web 2.0 integrated with IPTV for personalized home-based health information in diabetes education, particularly for people with diabetes who are not strong computer and Internet users, and thus may miss out on Web-based resources. We wanted to establish whether this system could enable diabetes educators to deliver personalized health information directly to people with diabetes in their homes; and whether this system could encourage people with diabetes who make little use of Web-based health information to build their health literacy via the interface of a home television screen and remote control.
This project was undertaken as design-based research in two stages. Stage 1 comprised a feasibility study into the technical work required to integrate an existing Web 2.0 platform with an existing IPTV system, populated with content and implemented for user trials in a laboratory setting. Stage 2 comprised an evaluation of the system by consumers and providers of diabetes information.
The project succeeded in developing a Web 2.0 IPTV system for people with diabetes and low literacies and their diabetes educators. The performance of the system in the laboratory setting gave them the confidence to engage seriously in thinking about the actual and potential features and benefits of a more widely-implemented system. In their feedback they pointed out a range of critical usability and usefulness issues related to Web 2.0 affordances and learning fundamentals. They also described their experiences with the system in terms that bode well for its educational potential, and they suggested many constructive improvements to the system.
The integration of Web 2.0 and IPTV merits further technical development, business modeling, and health services and health outcomes research, as a solution to extend the reach and scale of home-based health care.
将互联网协议电视(IPTV)用作消费者健康信息的传播渠道是医学互联网研究中一个相对未被充分探索的领域。IPTV可能为医疗服务提供者提供健康信息以及为消费者、患者和护理人员获取健康信息带来新的机遇。Web 2.0技术为IPTV的潜力增添了一个全新的、更未被充分探索的维度。
我们的研究探索了将Web 2.0与IPTV集成用于糖尿病教育中基于家庭的个性化健康信息的应用,特别是针对那些不太擅长使用计算机和互联网的糖尿病患者,否则他们可能会错过基于网络的资源。我们想确定该系统是否能使糖尿病教育工作者直接向在家中的糖尿病患者提供个性化健康信息;以及该系统是否能鼓励很少使用基于网络的健康信息的糖尿病患者通过家庭电视屏幕和遥控器界面提高他们的健康素养。
本项目作为基于设计的研究分两个阶段进行。第一阶段包括对将现有Web 2.0平台与现有IPTV系统集成所需的技术工作进行可行性研究,填充内容并在实验室环境中实施用户试验。第二阶段包括糖尿病信息的消费者和提供者对该系统的评估。
该项目成功地为糖尿病患者及低文化水平者及其糖尿病教育工作者开发了一个Web 2.0 IPTV系统。该系统在实验室环境中的表现使他们有信心认真思考更广泛实施的系统的实际和潜在特征及益处。在反馈中,他们指出了一系列与Web 2.0功能和学习基础相关的关键可用性和有用性问题。他们还以对其教育潜力有利的方式描述了他们使用该系统的体验,并对该系统提出了许多建设性的改进建议。
Web 2.0与IPTV的集成值得进一步进行技术开发、商业模式构建以及健康服务和健康结果研究,作为扩大基于家庭的医疗保健覆盖范围和规模的一种解决方案。