Understanding the Methodological Issues and Solutions in the Research Design of Stroke Caregiving Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Standard

Understanding the Methodological Issues and Solutions in the Research Design of Stroke Caregiving Technology. / Lobo, Elton H.; Frolich, Anne; Rasmussen, Lene J.; Livingston, Patricia M.; Grundy, John; Abdelrazek, Mohamed; Kensing, Finn.

In: Frontiers in Public Health, Vol. 9, 647249, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Lobo, EH, Frolich, A, Rasmussen, LJ, Livingston, PM, Grundy, J, Abdelrazek, M & Kensing, F 2021, 'Understanding the Methodological Issues and Solutions in the Research Design of Stroke Caregiving Technology', Frontiers in Public Health, vol. 9, 647249. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2021.647249

APA

Lobo, E. H., Frolich, A., Rasmussen, L. J., Livingston, P. M., Grundy, J., Abdelrazek, M., & Kensing, F. (2021). Understanding the Methodological Issues and Solutions in the Research Design of Stroke Caregiving Technology. Frontiers in Public Health, 9, [647249]. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2021.647249

Vancouver

Lobo EH, Frolich A, Rasmussen LJ, Livingston PM, Grundy J, Abdelrazek M et al. Understanding the Methodological Issues and Solutions in the Research Design of Stroke Caregiving Technology. Frontiers in Public Health. 2021;9. 647249. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2021.647249

Author

Lobo, Elton H. ; Frolich, Anne ; Rasmussen, Lene J. ; Livingston, Patricia M. ; Grundy, John ; Abdelrazek, Mohamed ; Kensing, Finn. / Understanding the Methodological Issues and Solutions in the Research Design of Stroke Caregiving Technology. In: Frontiers in Public Health. 2021 ; Vol. 9.

Bibtex

@article{13622fc8b8f34509aefbf7d0cec7bd95,
title = "Understanding the Methodological Issues and Solutions in the Research Design of Stroke Caregiving Technology",
abstract = "The rise in the number of cases of stroke has resulted in a significant burden on the healthcare system. As a result, the majority of care for the person living with stroke occurs within the community, resulting in caregivers being a central and challenged agent in care. To better support caregivers during the recovery trajectory poststroke, we investigated the role of health technologies to promote education and offer various kinds of support. However, the introduction of any new technology comes with challenges due to the growing need for more user-centric systems. The integration of user-centric systems in stroke caregiving has the potential to ensure long-term acceptance, success, and engagement with the technology, thereby ensuring better care for the person living with stroke. We first briefly characterize the affordances of available technologies for stroke caregiving. We then discuss key methodological issues related to the acceptance to such technologies. Finally, we suggest user-centered design strategies for mitigating such challenges.",
keywords = "stroke, caregiver, design methodology, technology, issues, solutions, user-centered design",
author = "Lobo, {Elton H.} and Anne Frolich and Rasmussen, {Lene J.} and Livingston, {Patricia M.} and John Grundy and Mohamed Abdelrazek and Finn Kensing",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3389/fpubh.2021.647249",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Frontiers in Public Health",
issn = "2296-2565",
publisher = "Frontiers Media",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding the Methodological Issues and Solutions in the Research Design of Stroke Caregiving Technology

AU - Lobo, Elton H.

AU - Frolich, Anne

AU - Rasmussen, Lene J.

AU - Livingston, Patricia M.

AU - Grundy, John

AU - Abdelrazek, Mohamed

AU - Kensing, Finn

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The rise in the number of cases of stroke has resulted in a significant burden on the healthcare system. As a result, the majority of care for the person living with stroke occurs within the community, resulting in caregivers being a central and challenged agent in care. To better support caregivers during the recovery trajectory poststroke, we investigated the role of health technologies to promote education and offer various kinds of support. However, the introduction of any new technology comes with challenges due to the growing need for more user-centric systems. The integration of user-centric systems in stroke caregiving has the potential to ensure long-term acceptance, success, and engagement with the technology, thereby ensuring better care for the person living with stroke. We first briefly characterize the affordances of available technologies for stroke caregiving. We then discuss key methodological issues related to the acceptance to such technologies. Finally, we suggest user-centered design strategies for mitigating such challenges.

AB - The rise in the number of cases of stroke has resulted in a significant burden on the healthcare system. As a result, the majority of care for the person living with stroke occurs within the community, resulting in caregivers being a central and challenged agent in care. To better support caregivers during the recovery trajectory poststroke, we investigated the role of health technologies to promote education and offer various kinds of support. However, the introduction of any new technology comes with challenges due to the growing need for more user-centric systems. The integration of user-centric systems in stroke caregiving has the potential to ensure long-term acceptance, success, and engagement with the technology, thereby ensuring better care for the person living with stroke. We first briefly characterize the affordances of available technologies for stroke caregiving. We then discuss key methodological issues related to the acceptance to such technologies. Finally, we suggest user-centered design strategies for mitigating such challenges.

KW - stroke

KW - caregiver

KW - design methodology

KW - technology

KW - issues

KW - solutions

KW - user-centered design

U2 - 10.3389/fpubh.2021.647249

DO - 10.3389/fpubh.2021.647249

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33937175

VL - 9

JO - Frontiers in Public Health

JF - Frontiers in Public Health

SN - 2296-2565

M1 - 647249

ER -

ID: 261326981