Cargando…

Balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: Experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and SRH programming in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Nigeria

In 2021, the Adolescents 360 (A360) project pursued a human-centered design (HCD) process to layer complementary economic empowerment components on top of its existing sexual and reproductive health (SRH) interventions targeting adolescent girls aged 15 to 19. Given the volume of evidence informing...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cutherell, Meghan, Phillips, Mary, Ellett, Carrie, Woubishet, Emnet, Ede, Joy Otsanya, Adesina, Akinjide, Kabahaula, Arnold, Nana-Sinkam, Alex, Musau, Abednego, Nichol, Katherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10547119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37795040
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.14724.1
_version_ 1785114994225971200
author Cutherell, Meghan
Phillips, Mary
Ellett, Carrie
Woubishet, Emnet
Ede, Joy Otsanya
Adesina, Akinjide
Kabahaula, Arnold
Nana-Sinkam, Alex
Musau, Abednego
Nichol, Katherine
author_facet Cutherell, Meghan
Phillips, Mary
Ellett, Carrie
Woubishet, Emnet
Ede, Joy Otsanya
Adesina, Akinjide
Kabahaula, Arnold
Nana-Sinkam, Alex
Musau, Abednego
Nichol, Katherine
author_sort Cutherell, Meghan
collection PubMed
description In 2021, the Adolescents 360 (A360) project pursued a human-centered design (HCD) process to layer complementary economic empowerment components on top of its existing sexual and reproductive health (SRH) interventions targeting adolescent girls aged 15 to 19. Given the volume of evidence informing successful approaches for improving economic and empowerment outcomes for adolescents, we pursued an intentionally evidence-informed and gender-intentional design process, while trying to also respond directly to user insights. In this open letter, we share how we utilized and validated the evidence-base while applying the core tenets of HCD (empathy and user insights) to design holistic, layered programming for girls. We describe three overarching categories which depict how we used the existing evidence and new user insights to strengthen our design process. Often the evidence base allowed us to expedite finding a solution that worked for our users. However, at times there was a disconnect between what we knew worked in the evidence base and what our users said they wanted. New insights also allowed us to build a greater understanding of our users’ lived experiences where there were existing evidence gaps. We were aided by the engagement of a technical partner, BRAC, who synthesized evidence for our design teams and functioned as an ‘on demand’ support mechanism as questions and challenges arose. Yet, the volume of information to absorb almost guaranteed that we would miss out on the opportunity to apply certain evidence-based practices. We encourage researchers to consider how to make evidence more easily digestible to practitioners and for the whole community of practice to work together to identify what questions need to be asked to effectively operationalize evidence in a local context.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10547119
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher F1000 Research Limited
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105471192023-10-04 Balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: Experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and SRH programming in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Nigeria Cutherell, Meghan Phillips, Mary Ellett, Carrie Woubishet, Emnet Ede, Joy Otsanya Adesina, Akinjide Kabahaula, Arnold Nana-Sinkam, Alex Musau, Abednego Nichol, Katherine Gates Open Res Open Letter In 2021, the Adolescents 360 (A360) project pursued a human-centered design (HCD) process to layer complementary economic empowerment components on top of its existing sexual and reproductive health (SRH) interventions targeting adolescent girls aged 15 to 19. Given the volume of evidence informing successful approaches for improving economic and empowerment outcomes for adolescents, we pursued an intentionally evidence-informed and gender-intentional design process, while trying to also respond directly to user insights. In this open letter, we share how we utilized and validated the evidence-base while applying the core tenets of HCD (empathy and user insights) to design holistic, layered programming for girls. We describe three overarching categories which depict how we used the existing evidence and new user insights to strengthen our design process. Often the evidence base allowed us to expedite finding a solution that worked for our users. However, at times there was a disconnect between what we knew worked in the evidence base and what our users said they wanted. New insights also allowed us to build a greater understanding of our users’ lived experiences where there were existing evidence gaps. We were aided by the engagement of a technical partner, BRAC, who synthesized evidence for our design teams and functioned as an ‘on demand’ support mechanism as questions and challenges arose. Yet, the volume of information to absorb almost guaranteed that we would miss out on the opportunity to apply certain evidence-based practices. We encourage researchers to consider how to make evidence more easily digestible to practitioners and for the whole community of practice to work together to identify what questions need to be asked to effectively operationalize evidence in a local context. F1000 Research Limited 2023-07-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10547119/ /pubmed/37795040 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.14724.1 Text en Copyright: © 2023 Cutherell M et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Open Letter
Cutherell, Meghan
Phillips, Mary
Ellett, Carrie
Woubishet, Emnet
Ede, Joy Otsanya
Adesina, Akinjide
Kabahaula, Arnold
Nana-Sinkam, Alex
Musau, Abednego
Nichol, Katherine
Balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: Experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and SRH programming in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Nigeria
title Balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: Experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and SRH programming in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Nigeria
title_full Balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: Experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and SRH programming in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Nigeria
title_fullStr Balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: Experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and SRH programming in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: Experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and SRH programming in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Nigeria
title_short Balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: Experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and SRH programming in Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Nigeria
title_sort balancing evidence-informed and user-responsive design: experience with human-centered design to generate layered economic empowerment and srh programming in tanzania, ethiopia, and nigeria
topic Open Letter
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10547119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37795040
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.14724.1
work_keys_str_mv AT cutherellmeghan balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT phillipsmary balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT ellettcarrie balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT woubishetemnet balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT edejoyotsanya balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT adesinaakinjide balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT kabahaulaarnold balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT nanasinkamalex balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT musauabednego balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria
AT nicholkatherine balancingevidenceinformedanduserresponsivedesignexperiencewithhumancentereddesigntogeneratelayeredeconomicempowermentandsrhprogrammingintanzaniaethiopiaandnigeria