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User Experience and Healthcare Sheetal Dube, Sr. User Experience Consultant Refresh Portland, June 25, 2009

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Tips on optimizing the design process for Healthcare systems - June 25, 2009

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Page 1: Refresh Portland - User Experience and Healthcare

User Experience and HealthcareSheetal Dube, Sr. User Experience Consultant

Refresh Portland, June 25, 2009

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2© 2009 EVANTAGE CONSULTING

User Experience and Healthcare

Source: Flickr, pwilson

Sheetal Dube

Sr. User Experience ConsultantEvantage ConsultingIndustrial Designer (M.DES.)11+ years User Experience2+ years Healthcare

Voice of customer studiesConcepts for medical devicesEducational website on SedationRemote monitoring website redesign

Intranet and extranet for a Fortune 500 company.Set up a design team and process for a large software development firm.

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Outline for today

1. Emerging concepts in Healthcare2. Web 2.0 bridging the gaps 3. Unmet user needs 4. Most players are newbie’s5. Varied familiarity with technology6. Learn about your users7. Help them articulate their needs8. User Centered Design process for Healthcare 9. Other challenges10.Questions?

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1. Emerging concepts

… lots to get excited aboutSource: Flickr, benefit of hindsight

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1. Emerging concepts

E-Patients:• Patients gathering health information online.• Especially patients with chronic illness and rare illnesses.

User generated content:• Crowd wisdom is better than expert wisdom.• Speed of generating content faster than publishing research.

Participatory medicine:• Shared decision making between patients and physicians.• Better patient compliance due to shared decision making.

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2. Web 2.0 bridging the gaps

… between traditional systems and emerging needs Source: Flickr, downtownpictures

Mary E Donnelly
On a couple of the slides like this, its hard to read the font in white at the bottom. You may want to play with the colors to see if you can find something that works better.
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2. Web 2.0 bridging the gaps

Electronic Health Records:• Google Health: http://www.google.com/intl/en-US/health/tour/index.html• Health Vault (Microsoft): http://www.healthvault.com/Personal/index.html

Online concepts:• HelloHealth: https://www.hellohealth.com/main/index.html

Target 18-35 (10% of today's market), mainly uninsured, online visits, take second opinions online, send pictures, blogs, online medical records, email exchange part of the medical records, etc.

• Patientslikeme: http://www.patientslikeme.com/ People with chronic illness, treatment, symptom and outcome-sharing community, patient information turns into data points, patients tap into robust information created by others.

• Kaiser Permanente’s My Health Manager: https://www.kaiserpermanente.org/Provides patients access to their health records, make online appointments, etc

• Connected heath: http://www.connected-health.org/Remote monitoring for chronically ill and at risk patients.

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Mary E Donnelly
If you watch the Experience My health manager video you can get better screen shots of things you can do. I took a couple for you and included them in the email.
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3. Unmet user needs

… current solutions are short term Source: Flickr, dreamfreaknicx

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3. Unmet user needs

ePatient Dave:• Kidney cancer survivor Dave deBronkart uploaded health records in Google Health.• Using insurance claims to construct the diagnosis made the data unusable. • http://www.forbes.com/2009/04/23/health-internet-records-technology-personal-tech-health

.html

Electronic Health Records:• Is the information easy to understand for the patients? • Does it make sense for the physician? Does it work with the clinic workflow? • Do ‘all’ users realize the value?

User voices:• Data entry is a burden – Amy Tenderrich, DiabetesMine• I don’t want to be reminded that I am a patient – Sentiments heard during interviews

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4. Most players are newbie's

… at early stages Source: Flickr,

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4. Most players are newbie's

Designers and developers are entering a new territory:• What should the blood pressure trend for vital signs history look like? • How do patients refer to the processes of sending device information to their doctors?

Patient expectations are currently set very low:• We are used to the current workflow and systems http://tiny.cc/RsowR • The current device works great – Heard during interviews with patients.

Role of physicians is changing:• Growing demand for healthcare forces physicians to give up control.• New wave of tech savvy physicians entering the field.

Hospitals and companies are at early stages of accepting change:• Many hospitals are still evaluating digitization.• Innovation might not be a necessity for companies that are market leaders.

Business models are not clear yet:• Who is paying for the change? Patients, organizations, hospitals, insurance companies, etc?

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5. Varied familiarity with technology

… adds additional challengesSource: Flickr, slipstreamJC

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5. Varied familiarity with technology

PEW Report: The Social Life of Health Information http://tiny.cc/Poera • 61% of American adults look online for health information. • The Internet does not replace health professionals. • As usual, there are more readers and listeners than writers and creators. • A majority of e-patients access user-generated health information. • Mobile access and generational shifts will have an effect on social media and healthcare. • E-patients are more engaged with health information. • Patients looking for "just-in-time someone-like-me" to help inform personal health decisions. • One in 3 American adults access social media for health reasons. That's 60% of online users. • Wikipedia is a go-to source among 1 in 2 e-patients. Twitter and other social networks like

Facebook -- not so much, but they're still used along with lots of other (non-social but still online) sources.

• There is opportunity to engage people to manage chronic conditions on a 24x7 basis given their increasing adoption of wireless, mobile technologies.

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5. Varied familiarity with technology

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Recap Key Challenges

Two big challenges for designing healthcare systems are:

1) Most stakeholders are at early stages of the revolution.2) Users familiarity with technology is varied.

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6. Learn about your users

… diverse ways, same goalSource: Flickr, Maggiesworld, shapeshift, vago

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Gather as much information as you can:• Demographic profile• Environment• Attitudes and perceptions• Familiarity with technology• Health conditions• Support system

Health Condition:Support system:Medications:Doctor visits:Scenarios of using the device (current project)Frequency of doctor visits.

6. Learn about your usersAge Group: Gender: Occupation:Geographical Location:Attitudes i.e., views on Technology:Perception i.e., trust factors: Environment.# outlets (medical device project):

Time spent on computer: Websites used for work and personal interests:Online shopping, banking, bill pay:Other products used like ATM machines, GPS, cell phone, etc..:

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Gather as much information as you can.

How can you learn about your users:• Make sure you have a plan.• Fields studies/observations are most valuable.• Surveys and interviews help fill the gaps too.• Mixing tools is recommended.• Find innovative ways e.g., interview professionals at a healthcare conference. • Don’t skip the screener (internal or recruiting company).• Recruit participants (physicians, patients, etc).• Collect qualitative and quantitative information. • Be careful with the words you use, be humble.• Make participants feel at ease.• Gratuities are important.• Might need to innovate e.g., charitable donations for gratuity.

CONTEXTUAL INQUIRIES:Observing users in their environment..Pros: Terminologies, processes, context, innovation.Cons: Takes more time and money. Recruiting more difficult.

6. Learn about your users

SURVEYS: Helps collect qualitative and quantitative data.Pros: Easy to implement, more inputs in less time.Cons: Subtleties get missed, learning is limited.

INTERVIEWS:Face to face or telephone.Pros: Helps get face time and have a deeper level of understanding about the users than surveys.Cons: Users rely on memory and thus miss some steps/ details.

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Gather as much information as you can.

How can you learn about your users.

What do you do with the details:• Define and prioritize user scenarios.• Make confident design decisions and trade offs.• Facilitate realistic conversations.• Most features could be NEW (not redesigned).• Spark initial concepts, innovate.

6. Learn about your users

Terminology FAILED:Home, Menu, Options, Scroll up, Scroll down, % complete, Icon for wireless connection, keyboard…anything to do with computers.

OK

Feature 1Feature 2Feature 3

Navigation/ Interaction FAILED:Highlighting an option and clicking OK.Which button to click to scroll up?

Learning: Touch-screen seemed intuitive.

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7. Help users articulate their needs

… visuals helpSource: Flickr, darydutchy, calramen

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Use visualization techniques:• Use sketches, 3D models, etc to help users visualize new ideas/ features.• Create prototypes to demonstrate processes.• Pick realistic scenarios to show/ demonstrate the above.• Show alternate concepts to make it easier for participants to opt out.

Plan for an iterative process:• Plan for smaller/ quicker cycles of learning and improvising.• Start with a broader scope and narrow it down as you get more information.• First, gain confidence about the concept and navigation.• Then focus on detailing and validating the feature set.

7. Help users articulate their needs

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8. User Centered Design Process for HealthcareSpecify the context of use

Identify the people who will use the product, what they

will use it for, and under what conditions they will

use it.

(ISO 13407: Human-centered design process)

Specify requirementsIdentify any business requirements or user goals that must be met for the product to be successful.

Create design solutionsThis part of the process may be done in stages, building from a rough concept to a complete design.

Evaluate designsThe most important

part of this process is that evaluation -

ideally through usability testing with

actual users - is as integral as quality testing is to good

software development.

… encourages the iterative approachSource: http://www.upassoc.org/usability_resources/about_usability/what_is_ucd.html

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8. User Centered Design Process for Healthcare

Analysis Phase :• Meet with key

stakeholders • Include usability tasks in

project plan • Assemble a

multidisciplinary• Develop usability goals

and objectives • Conduct field studies • Look at competitive

products • Create user profiles • Develop a task analysis • Document user scenarios • Document user

performance requirements

Design Phase :• Brainstorm design

concepts, metaphors • Develop screen flow

and navigation model • Do walkthroughs of

design concepts • Begin design with

paper and pencil • Create low-fidelity

prototypes • Conduct usability

testing on prototypes • Create high-fidelity

detailed design • Do usability testing• Create a design

specification

Implementation Phase:

• Do ongoing heuristic evaluations

• Work closely with delivery team as design is implemented

• Conduct usability testing as soon as possible

Deployment Phase :• Use surveys to get

user feedback • Conduct field studies

to get info about actual use

• Check objectives using usability testing

Select the right tools.

Gather as much information as possible..

Use the details.

Use techniques to help users understand new concepts.

Show design alternatives.

First, gain confidence about the concept and navigation or interaction.

Then evaluate the feature set based on user scenarios.

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9. Challenges for the Healthcare design process

… if this was not enough

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Overall Constraints:• HIPPA laws (patient data, hospital privacy).• NDAs (Non disclosure signed with clients).• Competitive analysis difficult.

Project Plan:• Plan to work across multiple teams i.e., legal, product planning, etc.• Plan to change course during the project.• Plan for higher gratuities.

User Research:• Recruit the right participants.• Get companies internal recruiting team to use a screener.• Work around the participant’s schedule.

Technical Issues:• Not all systems have been updated.

9. Challenges for the Healthcare design process

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10. Questions?

Thank You!Twitter id @SheetalDube