Vedanthan Rajesh, Blank Evan, Tuikong Nelly, Kamano Jemima, Misoi Lawrence, Tulienge Deborah, Hutchinson Claire, Ascheim Deborah D, Kimaiyo Sylvester, Fuster Valentin, Were Martin C
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Int J Med Inform. 2015 Mar;84(3):207-19. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2014.12.005. Epub 2015 Jan 7.
Mobile health (mHealth) applications have recently proliferated, especially in low- and middle-income countries, complementing task-redistribution strategies with clinical decision support. Relatively few studies address usability and feasibility issues that may impact success or failure of implementation, and few have been conducted for non-communicable diseases such as hypertension.
To conduct iterative usability and feasibility testing of a tablet-based Decision Support and Integrated Record-keeping (DESIRE) tool, a technology intended to assist rural clinicians taking care of hypertension patients at the community level in a resource-limited setting in western Kenya.
Usability testing consisted of "think aloud" exercises and "mock patient encounters" with five nurses, as well as one focus group discussion. Feasibility testing consisted of semi-structured interviews of five nurses and two members of the implementation team, and one focus group discussion with nurses. Content analysis was performed using both deductive codes and significant inductive codes. Critical incidents were identified and ranked according to severity. A cause-of-error analysis was used to develop corresponding design change suggestions.
Fifty-seven critical incidents were identified in usability testing, 21 of which were unique. The cause-of-error analysis yielded 23 design change suggestions. Feasibility themes included barriers to implementation along both human and technical axes, facilitators to implementation, provider issues, patient issues and feature requests.
This participatory, iterative human-centered design process revealed previously unaddressed usability and feasibility issues affecting the implementation of the DESIRE tool in western Kenya. In addition to well-known technical issues, we highlight the importance of human factors that can impact implementation of mHealth interventions.
移动健康(mHealth)应用最近迅速增加,尤其是在低收入和中等收入国家,用临床决策支持来补充任务重新分配策略。相对较少的研究探讨了可能影响实施成败的可用性和可行性问题,针对高血压等非传染性疾病开展的研究更少。
对基于平板电脑的决策支持与综合记录工具(DESIRE)进行迭代可用性和可行性测试,该技术旨在协助肯尼亚西部资源有限地区的农村临床医生在社区层面照顾高血压患者。
可用性测试包括与五名护士进行“出声思考”练习和“模拟患者问诊”,以及一次焦点小组讨论。可行性测试包括对五名护士和实施团队的两名成员进行半结构化访谈,以及与护士进行一次焦点小组讨论。使用演绎编码和重要归纳编码进行内容分析。识别关键事件并根据严重程度进行排序。采用错误原因分析来提出相应的设计变更建议。
在可用性测试中识别出57个关键事件,其中21个是独特的。错误原因分析产生了23条设计变更建议。可行性主题包括人力和技术方面的实施障碍、实施促进因素、提供者问题、患者问题和功能需求。
这种参与式、迭代的以人为本的设计过程揭示了影响DESIRE工具在肯尼亚西部实施的先前未解决的可用性和可行性问题。除了众所周知的技术问题外,我们强调了可能影响移动健康干预措施实施的人为因素的重要性。