2019
DOI: 10.1007/s12553-019-00332-5
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Co-designing a digital platform with boundary objects: bringing together heterogeneous users in healthcare

Abstract: Healthcare is increasingly permeated with digital platforms supporting cooperative care involving both caregivers (i.e. nurses and physicians) and also patients. New mobile technologies allow for patients to continuously monitor and document their symptoms and gather data that can increase self-care and support the nurse's decision-making process. A design process of such platforms calls for new design approaches involving heterogeneous conditions and goals. Our research is conducted at a clinic that supports … Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…These activities and artefacts served as effective bridging mechanisms for linking actors from different social worlds, e.g., farmers and researchers; traders and credit institutions, in the co-design process [33]. By this we contribute to a growing literature on co-designing digital platforms through such bridging mechanisms by showing further evidence of the efficacy of the design approach [36,37]. In addition, our findings show that aligning digital platform design with the capabilities of farmers as well as focusing directly on their key needs enabled farmer comprehension, ownership, and ease of adoption of the platform.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…These activities and artefacts served as effective bridging mechanisms for linking actors from different social worlds, e.g., farmers and researchers; traders and credit institutions, in the co-design process [33]. By this we contribute to a growing literature on co-designing digital platforms through such bridging mechanisms by showing further evidence of the efficacy of the design approach [36,37]. In addition, our findings show that aligning digital platform design with the capabilities of farmers as well as focusing directly on their key needs enabled farmer comprehension, ownership, and ease of adoption of the platform.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…By introducing the app as a new data collection tool, including new visualizations, the data work becomes distributed outside the clinic and into the patient's everyday life. 28,29 We argue that this transition shifts the decision-making between the patient and the nurse and affects the nurse's questioning tactics. In the following text, we will elaborate on these three concepts and discuss the consequence for translation work.…”
Section: Shifts In Translation Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When mobile technology is introduced, the work practice becomes increasingly distributed. [28][29][30] The shift from the consultation, within the institutionalized healthcare facility, "owned" by healthcare, to the patient's technology and everyday life resembles what Bellotti and Bly 31 and Luff and Heath 32 discuss. The effect for this practice is a distributed array of data which continuously flows from the patient's everyday life.…”
Section: Shift In Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Co-design involves end users throughout the design process as active partners [ 20 ], providing people whose lives might be affected by a problem with a voice in its solution [ 21 , 22 ]. Evidence suggests that the inclusion of end users in the early stages of the design process leads to better outcomes and more benefits compared with ideas developed by designers alone [ 23 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%