Ginsburg Amy Sarah, Delarosa Jaclyn, Brunette Waylon, Levari Shahar, Sundt Mitch, Larson Clarice, Tawiah Agyemang Charlotte, Newton Sam, Borriello Gaetano, Anderson Richard
PATH, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Oct 16;10(10):e0139625. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0139625. eCollection 2015.
Pneumonia is the leading infectious cause of death in children worldwide. Each year, pneumonia kills an estimated 935,000 children under five years of age, with most of these deaths occurring in developing countries. The current approach for pneumonia diagnosis in low-resource settings--using the World Health Organization Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) paper-based protocols and relying on a health care provider's ability to manually count respiratory rate--has proven inadequate. Furthermore, hypoxemia--a diagnostic indicator of the presence and severity of pneumonia often associated with an increased risk of death--is not assessed because pulse oximetry is frequently not available in low-resource settings. In an effort to address childhood pneumonia mortality and improve frontline health care providers' ability to diagnose, classify, and manage pneumonia and other childhood illnesses, PATH collaborated with the University of Washington to develop "mPneumonia," an innovative mobile health application using an Android tablet. mPneumonia integrates a digital version of the IMCI algorithm with a software-based breath counter and a pediatric pulse oximeter. We conducted a design-stage usability field test of mPneumonia in Ghana, with the goal of creating a user-friendly diagnostic and management tool for childhood pneumonia and other childhood illnesses that would improve diagnostic accuracy and facilitate adherence by health care providers to established guidelines in low-resource settings. The results of the field test provided valuable information for understanding the usability and acceptability of mPneumonia among health care providers, and identifying approaches to iterate and improve. This critical feedback helped ascertain the common failure modes related to the user interface design, navigation, and accessibility of mPneumonia and the modifications required to improve user experience and create a tool aimed at decreasing mortality from pneumonia and other childhood illnesses in low-resource settings.
肺炎是全球儿童死亡的主要感染性病因。每年,肺炎估计导致93.5万名五岁以下儿童死亡,其中大部分死亡发生在发展中国家。在资源匮乏地区,目前用于肺炎诊断的方法——使用世界卫生组织的《儿童疾病综合管理》(IMCI)纸质协议,并依赖医护人员手动计数呼吸频率——已被证明是不够的。此外,低氧血症(肺炎存在和严重程度的诊断指标,通常与死亡风险增加相关)未得到评估,因为在资源匮乏地区通常无法获得脉搏血氧饱和度测定仪。为了解决儿童肺炎死亡率问题,并提高一线医护人员诊断、分类和管理肺炎及其他儿童疾病的能力,PATH与华盛顿大学合作开发了“移动肺炎诊断应用程序”(mPneumonia),这是一款使用安卓平板电脑的创新型移动健康应用程序。mPneumonia将IMCI算法的数字版本与基于软件的呼吸计数器和儿童脉搏血氧仪集成在一起。我们在加纳对mPneumonia进行了设计阶段的可用性现场测试,目标是创建一个用户友好的儿童肺炎及其他儿童疾病诊断和管理工具,以提高诊断准确性,并促进医护人员在资源匮乏地区遵守既定指南。现场测试结果为了解医护人员对mPneumonia的可用性和可接受性,以及确定迭代和改进方法提供了有价值的信息。这些关键反馈有助于确定与mPneumonia的用户界面设计、导航和可访问性相关的常见故障模式,以及改善用户体验和创建旨在降低资源匮乏地区肺炎及其他儿童疾病死亡率的工具所需的修改。