O objetivo deste estudo foi realizar uma revisão sistemática prisma utilizando a técnica prisma que permitiu identificar quais os principais problemas de saúde causados em mulheres que utilizaram dispositivos contraceptivos reversíveis de longa duração. Na metodologia adotada selecionaram-se os artigos por um processo de 04 níveis hierárquicos, utilizando-se critérios de corte. No primeiro nível foram selecionados 1391 artigos publicados entre os anos de 2017 a 2021, nas bases de dados SciELO, Google Acadêmico, PubMed/MEDLINE e Biblioteca Virtual de Saúde BVS/LILACS, utilizando-se palavras chaves como critério. Nos níveis seguintes, selecionaram-se artigos que continham temas, títulos e resumos relacionados aos do trabalho. Após seleção e triagem houve uma redução na quantidade de artigos para 50 selecionados, representando 3,59% do total, sendo a PubMed/MEDLINE com 40 artigos a plataforma com maior participação correspondendo a 2,88 %. As demais plataformas apresentaram os seguintes valores: SciELO 02 artigos (0,14%); Google acadêmico e LILACS 04 artigos cada (0,28%). Identificou-se ainda, os principais problemas de saúde e as incidências nas plataformas: Sangramento (PubMed/MEDLINE 20%; LILACS e Google acadêmico 4%); ganho de peso (PubMed/MEDLINE 16%; BVS/LILACS 4%); migração do implante de subdérmico (PubMed 28%); influência na função sexual (PubMed/MEDLINE 6%); outros (PubMed/MEDLINE 28%; BVS/LILACS 14%). Verificou-se, que os principais problemas de saúde relatados foram sangramento e migração do implante. Logo, esta revisão os principais tipos de problemas de saúde causados pelos dispositivos contraceptivos reversíveis de longa duração, num intervalo de tempo curto, não comprometendo a acurácia dos resultados.
The main objective of this research is to provide a procedure set, oriented by a clear and rigorous protocol that allows the replication of results regarding the accessibility claims of products and systems available for the blind community, thus validating their robustness. The goal during the experiment was to compare user preferences and effectiveness when performing tasks with the voice synthesizers JAWS and DOSVOX and a braille keyboard. The adopted evaluation protocol includes the following methods: usability testing, focus group, and user satisfaction survey. The study developed with the proposed protocol investigates assistive technology adequacy to target users. The tasks performed by 30 users were categorized as activities of entertainment, learning, and social inclusion. It is considered that the main contribution of this chapter is to provide the protocol and methodology, adapted for use in evaluations of accessibility products and devices.
The main objective of this research is to provide a procedure set, oriented by a clear and rigorous protocol that allows the replication of results regarding the accessibility claims of products and systems available for the blind community, thus validating their robustness. The goal during the experiment was to compare user preferences and effectiveness when performing tasks with the voice synthesizers JAWS and DOSVOX and a braille keyboard. The adopted evaluation protocol includes the following methods: usability testing, focus group, and user satisfaction survey. The study developed with the proposed protocol investigates assistive technology adequacy to target users. The tasks performed by 30 users were categorized as activities of entertainment, learning, and social inclusion. It is considered that the main contribution of this chapter is to provide the protocol and methodology, adapted for use in evaluations of accessibility products and devices.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.