A brief exploration of why patients resist changing their attitudes and behaviors to adhere to recommended medication and treatment protocols and what we, as UX professionals, can do to reach them.
Design Thinking and Disruptive Innovation in Healthcare MarketingMaurice Codourey
Presentation at Lithuanian Parliament, Vilnius 2014. Keynote for the international conference about "Drivers for Progress in the Global Society". What about alternative methods and experimental case studies/practical research in healthcare marketing of a public city hospital. Aspects of Design Thinking and Disruptive Innovation in action. Findings after almost 3 years of work - much more than just some viral effects.
Auckland ux meetup Sept 13 augmented reality in healthcarehealthydigital
Ian Power from Healthy Digital presents an update of some cool AR stuff happening in healthcare, and an intro to an idea to improve patient adherence with long term medicines.
Presented to the Auckland UX meet up, September 2013
New Ideas on the Future of Healthcare at WebVisions PDXElizabeth Bacon
This is a super-quickie presentation given as part of a panel where I introduce some of my recent thoughts about the role of design with respect to the future of healthcare.
UX in Healthcare Tech: Humanistic Design to Motivate User BehaviorTryMyUI
Aimee Richardson, Lead UX Researcher at Kaiser Permanente, presents on user research and design in healthcare tech, using a Prediabetes patient app she worked on as an example.
UX in healthcare tech necessitates sensitive in-depth user research, understanding and empathy with users, and design sense for creating software that meets their needs and motivates behavioral change, whether to eat better or keep to their medication schedule.
Aimee's presentation was part of the UX in Healthcare Tech webinar hosted by TryMyUI. Learn more at www.trymyui.com/webinar
Design Thinking and Disruptive Innovation in Healthcare MarketingMaurice Codourey
Presentation at Lithuanian Parliament, Vilnius 2014. Keynote for the international conference about "Drivers for Progress in the Global Society". What about alternative methods and experimental case studies/practical research in healthcare marketing of a public city hospital. Aspects of Design Thinking and Disruptive Innovation in action. Findings after almost 3 years of work - much more than just some viral effects.
Auckland ux meetup Sept 13 augmented reality in healthcarehealthydigital
Ian Power from Healthy Digital presents an update of some cool AR stuff happening in healthcare, and an intro to an idea to improve patient adherence with long term medicines.
Presented to the Auckland UX meet up, September 2013
New Ideas on the Future of Healthcare at WebVisions PDXElizabeth Bacon
This is a super-quickie presentation given as part of a panel where I introduce some of my recent thoughts about the role of design with respect to the future of healthcare.
UX in Healthcare Tech: Humanistic Design to Motivate User BehaviorTryMyUI
Aimee Richardson, Lead UX Researcher at Kaiser Permanente, presents on user research and design in healthcare tech, using a Prediabetes patient app she worked on as an example.
UX in healthcare tech necessitates sensitive in-depth user research, understanding and empathy with users, and design sense for creating software that meets their needs and motivates behavioral change, whether to eat better or keep to their medication schedule.
Aimee's presentation was part of the UX in Healthcare Tech webinar hosted by TryMyUI. Learn more at www.trymyui.com/webinar
Never before in history have computers been so powerful or had so much reach. This gives us a tremendous opportunity to help millions of people increase their health and well-being. In order to do this, UX practitioners need to be leaders in their organizations - inspiring, collaborating, and communicating their vision. This talk will employ teachings from the Kadampa masters of 11th century Tibet, UX methods that have been in practice since the mid-sixties, along with insights from Jen's work at Draftfcb Healthcare.
Bookends of the Patient Experience: Improvement Strategies from Admission to ...TraceByTWSG
Yvonne Chase has a strategy. She shows how hospitals can prepare for the paradigm shift of value-based purchasing. She has the exact revenue cycle tools and processes used to streamline patient access, coordinate patient care and conduct patient follow-up post discharge – all while monitoring patient interactions to ensure clear and accurate communication from the first point of contact to the last.
Delight 2013 | Experience Design in HealthcareDelight Summit
James Oliver Senior from Mayo Clinic shares insight on delivering delightful patient experiences at Delight 2013.
Originally presented at Delight 2013, Oct. 7-8, 2013. http://delight.us/conference
Evidence-Based Design for Healthcare FacilitiesSara Marberry
A short tutorial that explains the evidence-based design process for planning and building healthcare facilities -- hospitals, clinics, physician offices, nursing homes.
Health UX - Mark A. M. Kramer - Technology Experience within Healthcare: Monkeyshot
How technology has evolved and influenced the healthcare experience. Emphasis will be placed on the “Technology Experience” of patients and healthcare providers (medical doctors, nurses, technicians) Furthermore, this keynote shares personal observations of how technology experience within medicine and healthcare is evolving from a patient perspective.
This presentation provides inspiration and insights into current and emerging health-care experiences.
ABSTRACT: UX and Interaction Designers, combined with Participatory Design strategies, can shape relevant, potentially life-saving health-care experiences.
Experience Design inspiration.
1/7 of the UXPA 2014 Ignite session "Ethical Dilemmas in UX"
Ever wondered if you should ask THAT question? Join us for a series of passionate speakers sharing their thoughts on ethics, what difficult situations they have faced, what they did, and why. Topics will cover lab situations, field situations and business situations. You will gain tactics to use in the future when issues arise.
This workshop presents an accessible framework for understanding sketching to help communication, understanding, and problem solving -- particularly during a design process that includes multiple roles (that don't always speak the same language).
I propose, not only that sketching helps bridge gaps in communication and get to a deeper level of understanding, but also that every kind of sketching activity falls into one of three categories; thinking, talking, and showing.
In this workshop, for each type of sketching we cover:
- Who it helps
- What it is
- When it can help
- Why you don't need to "know how to draw" to use it
- How to be prepared to use it
You don’t even need to know how to “draw” to learn and apply the methods covered here. After attending this session you will be more comfortable with and better prepared to recognize opportunities where sketching can be used to increase communication and understanding with clients, stakeholders, coworkers, as well as all by yourself, as you work through problems and come up with solutions.
Coping with Complexity in Healthcare: Enabling Sense-Making Through Great UX ...Tim Merrill
Current trends have expanded the role that people play in monitoring, managing, and making decisions about their health. Whether people are selecting the right health insurance plan, evaluating treatment options, or trying to comprehend and gain actionable insight from complex medical tests or their own fitness data, they are often faced with complex and unfamiliar information and data. Failure to make sense of this information can lead to anxiety, poor decisions, and missed learning opportunities. User experience professionals have an important role to play in improving health care by facilitating comprehension, clarity and actionable insight. In this session we will discuss how to design experiences that support complex decisions and sense-making in the healthcare space. You’ll learn how different types of users approach diverse health information and offer you practical guidance on how to improve their experiences.
User Experience (UX) Research in HealthcareDan Berlin
Healthcare companies should embrace iterative user research so that they may design products that aligns with their customers' wants and needs. UX research studies are not clinical trials - they are a means of learn how to best design a product for customers.
UX Antwerp Meetup, 13th of December 2016 - Serge Hufkens, UX Architect at Monkeyshot (Antwerp, Belgium)
"The designer will see you next"
Once there was a designer who fell in love with healthcare, he even thought he could make her “better”. More than 2 years later he’s still in love, but it was a very stubborn and sobering relation so far, because she doesn't really love designers back. So if you want to get to know her, come and listen to my personal survival tips. Spoiler: no smashing designs or one-liner UX tips in this presentation – which should be refreshing.
– Serge is UX Architect at Monkeyshot, crafting solid digital user experiences and spreading the word about design in healthcare. Besides that burning passion for design, he spends the rest of his time raising 3 kids with the lovely Sarah in a mad world and getting upset about the superficiality of modern life.
Design Thinking: Finding Problems Worth Solving In HealthAdam Connor
Ideas for new devices and services can come from anywhere. But great ideas come from aligning solutions with real value and desirability for people. Design thinking provides a set of principles and structure that can act as scaffolding for teams to find and understand challenges and opportunities to focus on fan find solutions for.
Presentation about traumatic childbirth and obstetric violence impact on midwives.
By Ibone Olza Fernandez, MD, PhD, perinatal psychiatrist and childbirth activist.
1.What are the risks of revealing mistakes in an open culture, as a kendahudson
1.What are the risks of revealing mistakes in an open culture, as a way of being transparent with patients and families? What are the risks of concealing mistakes and errors?
2.What are the differences you see between a culture of accountability, where people are held accountable for the mistakes they make, and the Just Culture approach, where mistakes are not punished, but seen as methods of learning? What are the pros and cons of each?
A few reccomend refreferences
Any other Reference list used be 2016 or newer. AnAnswer each prompt in 250 words apa intext citation and apa citation of scholastic reference used.
"Tooling Up to Prevent Never Events," by Cantrell, from
Healthcare Purchasing News
(2016).
"The Role of Patient Spirituality in a Culture of Safety," by Cascio, from
ONS Connect
(2016).
"Determining Minimal Risk for Comparative Effectiveness Research," by Joffe and Wertheimer, from
IRB: Ethics and Human Research
(2014)
...
Never before in history have computers been so powerful or had so much reach. This gives us a tremendous opportunity to help millions of people increase their health and well-being. In order to do this, UX practitioners need to be leaders in their organizations - inspiring, collaborating, and communicating their vision. This talk will employ teachings from the Kadampa masters of 11th century Tibet, UX methods that have been in practice since the mid-sixties, along with insights from Jen's work at Draftfcb Healthcare.
Bookends of the Patient Experience: Improvement Strategies from Admission to ...TraceByTWSG
Yvonne Chase has a strategy. She shows how hospitals can prepare for the paradigm shift of value-based purchasing. She has the exact revenue cycle tools and processes used to streamline patient access, coordinate patient care and conduct patient follow-up post discharge – all while monitoring patient interactions to ensure clear and accurate communication from the first point of contact to the last.
Delight 2013 | Experience Design in HealthcareDelight Summit
James Oliver Senior from Mayo Clinic shares insight on delivering delightful patient experiences at Delight 2013.
Originally presented at Delight 2013, Oct. 7-8, 2013. http://delight.us/conference
Evidence-Based Design for Healthcare FacilitiesSara Marberry
A short tutorial that explains the evidence-based design process for planning and building healthcare facilities -- hospitals, clinics, physician offices, nursing homes.
Health UX - Mark A. M. Kramer - Technology Experience within Healthcare: Monkeyshot
How technology has evolved and influenced the healthcare experience. Emphasis will be placed on the “Technology Experience” of patients and healthcare providers (medical doctors, nurses, technicians) Furthermore, this keynote shares personal observations of how technology experience within medicine and healthcare is evolving from a patient perspective.
This presentation provides inspiration and insights into current and emerging health-care experiences.
ABSTRACT: UX and Interaction Designers, combined with Participatory Design strategies, can shape relevant, potentially life-saving health-care experiences.
Experience Design inspiration.
1/7 of the UXPA 2014 Ignite session "Ethical Dilemmas in UX"
Ever wondered if you should ask THAT question? Join us for a series of passionate speakers sharing their thoughts on ethics, what difficult situations they have faced, what they did, and why. Topics will cover lab situations, field situations and business situations. You will gain tactics to use in the future when issues arise.
This workshop presents an accessible framework for understanding sketching to help communication, understanding, and problem solving -- particularly during a design process that includes multiple roles (that don't always speak the same language).
I propose, not only that sketching helps bridge gaps in communication and get to a deeper level of understanding, but also that every kind of sketching activity falls into one of three categories; thinking, talking, and showing.
In this workshop, for each type of sketching we cover:
- Who it helps
- What it is
- When it can help
- Why you don't need to "know how to draw" to use it
- How to be prepared to use it
You don’t even need to know how to “draw” to learn and apply the methods covered here. After attending this session you will be more comfortable with and better prepared to recognize opportunities where sketching can be used to increase communication and understanding with clients, stakeholders, coworkers, as well as all by yourself, as you work through problems and come up with solutions.
Coping with Complexity in Healthcare: Enabling Sense-Making Through Great UX ...Tim Merrill
Current trends have expanded the role that people play in monitoring, managing, and making decisions about their health. Whether people are selecting the right health insurance plan, evaluating treatment options, or trying to comprehend and gain actionable insight from complex medical tests or their own fitness data, they are often faced with complex and unfamiliar information and data. Failure to make sense of this information can lead to anxiety, poor decisions, and missed learning opportunities. User experience professionals have an important role to play in improving health care by facilitating comprehension, clarity and actionable insight. In this session we will discuss how to design experiences that support complex decisions and sense-making in the healthcare space. You’ll learn how different types of users approach diverse health information and offer you practical guidance on how to improve their experiences.
User Experience (UX) Research in HealthcareDan Berlin
Healthcare companies should embrace iterative user research so that they may design products that aligns with their customers' wants and needs. UX research studies are not clinical trials - they are a means of learn how to best design a product for customers.
UX Antwerp Meetup, 13th of December 2016 - Serge Hufkens, UX Architect at Monkeyshot (Antwerp, Belgium)
"The designer will see you next"
Once there was a designer who fell in love with healthcare, he even thought he could make her “better”. More than 2 years later he’s still in love, but it was a very stubborn and sobering relation so far, because she doesn't really love designers back. So if you want to get to know her, come and listen to my personal survival tips. Spoiler: no smashing designs or one-liner UX tips in this presentation – which should be refreshing.
– Serge is UX Architect at Monkeyshot, crafting solid digital user experiences and spreading the word about design in healthcare. Besides that burning passion for design, he spends the rest of his time raising 3 kids with the lovely Sarah in a mad world and getting upset about the superficiality of modern life.
Design Thinking: Finding Problems Worth Solving In HealthAdam Connor
Ideas for new devices and services can come from anywhere. But great ideas come from aligning solutions with real value and desirability for people. Design thinking provides a set of principles and structure that can act as scaffolding for teams to find and understand challenges and opportunities to focus on fan find solutions for.
Presentation about traumatic childbirth and obstetric violence impact on midwives.
By Ibone Olza Fernandez, MD, PhD, perinatal psychiatrist and childbirth activist.
1.What are the risks of revealing mistakes in an open culture, as a kendahudson
1.What are the risks of revealing mistakes in an open culture, as a way of being transparent with patients and families? What are the risks of concealing mistakes and errors?
2.What are the differences you see between a culture of accountability, where people are held accountable for the mistakes they make, and the Just Culture approach, where mistakes are not punished, but seen as methods of learning? What are the pros and cons of each?
A few reccomend refreferences
Any other Reference list used be 2016 or newer. AnAnswer each prompt in 250 words apa intext citation and apa citation of scholastic reference used.
"Tooling Up to Prevent Never Events," by Cantrell, from
Healthcare Purchasing News
(2016).
"The Role of Patient Spirituality in a Culture of Safety," by Cascio, from
ONS Connect
(2016).
"Determining Minimal Risk for Comparative Effectiveness Research," by Joffe and Wertheimer, from
IRB: Ethics and Human Research
(2014)
...
Running Head: FALSE NEWS
Bias and False News
Student Name
Course
Institution
Introduction
The 2016 election was one of the more controversial elections of the current age. Strong feelings rose on either side, based on personal values and belief structures. Sadly, these feelings were fueled by the presence of false news reports in social media. Untruthfulness was abundant and some stories were so outrageous it begged the question why anyone would believe them in the first place. These false news stories continued to occur because the readers believed what they wanted according to their personal bias, and also because their surroundings and exposure made their bias seem logical.
What is fake news
In the 2016 election, news stories seemed to occur every single day that leaned strongly toward one candidate or the other. Some of these accounts purported lies that were so outrageous that they were questionably slander. Other stories were much more difficult to flush out, because they seemed to have a ring of truth to them. These are the stories that caused division and conflict on social media, flueing partisanship. These stories were widely accepted because they had a ring of plausibility to them, such as the idea that a television show had been rumored to cause autism (Kraft, 2016) or that the vaccine Gardasil had caused the death of young girls. (“Gardasil Vaccine: one more girl dead,” 2017) Individuals took these stories as truth, and used them as examples of corruption in government, or as examples of media bias. In their mind, these stories supported their own ideals that one candidate was better than the other, when in reality there was no truth attached to any of these tories.
Mental Scotoma
So what is it that causes an individual to believe fake news reports? In part, this willingness to believe something without checking its accuracy goes back to the idea of mental scotoma. Medically defined, mental scotoma is a figurative blind spot in a person's psychological awareness, the patient being unable to gain insight into and to understand his mental problems.” (Farlex, 2012) Now, this definition reads as though anyone who believe false news reports has a mental illness, and that idea is not accurate. But for those who believe fake news sources without question, this behavior demonstrates a lack of insight regarding accepting views that contradict one's own. There is a “blind spot” in the mental vision. This blind spot makes an individual more susceptible to accepting the views that we align with and rejecting the ones which we do not. In short, the mind believes what it wants to believe. Our preference based decisions are based on our past experiences and the way that these experiences are projected into our psyche. (Bazerman, 2017) In other words, individuals carry with them the certain impressions that are created from their schema; these mental attitudes are what form biases ...
McGovern Award Lecture - American Medical Writers AssociationGary Schwitzer
The McGovern Award is given by the American Medical Writers Association for "preeminent contributions to medical communications." It was presented at the AMWA annual conference, in Memphis, October 9, 2014.
How to combat misinformation on vaccines and other public health issuesWilliam D Leach
Research on metacognition yields eight communication strategies for inoculating the public against harmful health myths when standard techniques fail or backfire.
Similar to UX in Healthcare - why are patients so resistent to good advice?! (8)
CHAPTER 1 SEMESTER V PREVENTIVE-PEDIATRICS.pdfSachin Sharma
This content provides an overview of preventive pediatrics. It defines preventive pediatrics as preventing disease and promoting children's physical, mental, and social well-being to achieve positive health. It discusses antenatal, postnatal, and social preventive pediatrics. It also covers various child health programs like immunization, breastfeeding, ICDS, and the roles of organizations like WHO, UNICEF, and nurses in preventive pediatrics.
ICH Guidelines for Pharmacovigilance.pdfNEHA GUPTA
The "ICH Guidelines for Pharmacovigilance" PDF provides a comprehensive overview of the International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH) guidelines related to pharmacovigilance. These guidelines aim to ensure that drugs are safe and effective for patients by monitoring and assessing adverse effects, ensuring proper reporting systems, and improving risk management practices. The document is essential for professionals in the pharmaceutical industry, regulatory authorities, and healthcare providers, offering detailed procedures and standards for pharmacovigilance activities to enhance drug safety and protect public health.
The Importance of Community Nursing Care.pdfAD Healthcare
NDIS and Community 24/7 Nursing Care is a specific type of support that may be provided under the NDIS for individuals with complex medical needs who require ongoing nursing care in a community setting, such as their home or a supported accommodation facility.
This document is designed as an introductory to medical students,nursing students,midwives or other healthcare trainees to improve their understanding about how health system in Sri Lanka cares children health.
COVID-19 PCR tests remain a critical component of safe and responsible travel in 2024. They ensure compliance with international travel regulations, help detect and control the spread of new variants, protect vulnerable populations, and provide peace of mind. As we continue to navigate the complexities of global travel during the pandemic, PCR testing stands as a key measure to keep everyone safe and healthy. Whether you are planning a business trip, a family vacation, or an international adventure, incorporating PCR testing into your travel plans is a prudent and necessary step. Visit us at https://www.globaltravelclinics.com/
Global launch of the Healthy Ageing and Prevention Index 2nd wave – alongside...ILC- UK
The Healthy Ageing and Prevention Index is an online tool created by ILC that ranks countries on six metrics including, life span, health span, work span, income, environmental performance, and happiness. The Index helps us understand how well countries have adapted to longevity and inform decision makers on what must be done to maximise the economic benefits that comes with living well for longer.
Alongside the 77th World Health Assembly in Geneva on 28 May 2024, we launched the second version of our Index, allowing us to track progress and give new insights into what needs to be done to keep populations healthier for longer.
The speakers included:
Professor Orazio Schillaci, Minister of Health, Italy
Dr Hans Groth, Chairman of the Board, World Demographic & Ageing Forum
Professor Ilona Kickbusch, Founder and Chair, Global Health Centre, Geneva Graduate Institute and co-chair, World Health Summit Council
Dr Natasha Azzopardi Muscat, Director, Country Health Policies and Systems Division, World Health Organisation EURO
Dr Marta Lomazzi, Executive Manager, World Federation of Public Health Associations
Dr Shyam Bishen, Head, Centre for Health and Healthcare and Member of the Executive Committee, World Economic Forum
Dr Karin Tegmark Wisell, Director General, Public Health Agency of Sweden
LGBTQ+ Adults: Unique Opportunities and Inclusive Approaches to CareVITASAuthor
This webinar helps clinicians understand the unique healthcare needs of the LGBTQ+ community, primarily in relation to end-of-life care. Topics include social and cultural background and challenges, healthcare disparities, advanced care planning, and strategies for reaching the community and improving quality of care.
The global radiation oncology market size reached US$ 8.1 Billion in 2023. Looking forward, IMARC Group expects the market to reach US$ 14.5 Billion by 2032, exhibiting a growth rate (CAGR) of 6.5% during 2024-2032.
More Info:- https://www.imarcgroup.com/radiation-oncology-market
15. Four strategies used to convince parents that
vaccination is safe and that there is no link
between vaccination and autism:
1. Correcting false claims with facts
2. Describing disease risks to unvaccinated
children
3. Disease narrative/”True Story”
4. Disease images
Vaccine Promotion Messaging
16. Four strategies used to convince parents that
vaccination is safe and that there is no link
between vaccination and autism:
1. Correcting false claims with facts
2. Describing disease risks to unvaccinated
children
3. Disease narrative/”True Story”
4. Disease images
Vaccine Promotion Messaging
17. “False beliefs, it turns out, have … to
do with self-identity: What kind of
person am I, and what kind of
person do I want to be? ”
Stephan Lewandowsky, researcher on
misinformation and false beliefs
26. But with the narrative they
create about their condition
I’m going to
prescribe some
medication, but
you also need to
make some
changes
I’m not normal.
Who will want to
be around me?
My life will never
be the same.
Strong false beliefs are usually tied to a deeper self perception or identification. If you try to fight them head on, you will lose.
Let me ask you to do something with me. Close your eyes for just a moment. Now, go back to your childhood. Try to think about a specific experience when you felt loved, cared for, utterly secure. Really fill in the details. Who was there, what were you doing, what were the scents and sounds.
Now: did your memory involve food? If so, raise your hand.
So, many of us, to one degree or another, probably hold the false belief that happiness and togetherness and belonging require eating the way that we were brought up. And, if we change that, we will lose a little bit of our joy in life, our feeling of belonging.
It’s important to realize that all of us hold some false beliefs, or associations, that make it hard to accept healthcare advice to the contrary.