Improving Patient Experience and Primary Care Quality for Patients With Complex Chronic Disease Using the Electronic Patient-Reported Outcomes Tool: Adopting Qualitative Methods Into a User-Centered Design Approach
JMIR Research Protocols2016Vol. 5(1), pp. e28–e28
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2016 papers
Carolyn Steele Gray, Anum Irfan Khan, Kerry Kuluski, Ian McKillop, Sarah Sharpe, Arlene S. Bierman, Renee F Lyons, Cheryl Cott
Abstract
Interpretive descriptive methods allow for an understanding of user experiences of patients with CCDD, their carers, and primary care providers. Qualitative methods help to capture and interpret user needs, and identify contextual barriers and enablers to tool adoption, informing a redesign to better suit the needs of this diverse user group. This study illustrates the value of adopting interpretive descriptive methods into user-centered mHealth tool design and can also serve to inform the design of other eHealth technologies. Our approach is particularly useful in requirements determination when developing for a complex user group and their health care providers.
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