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Co-Creation With TickiT: Designing and Evaluating a Clinical eHealth Platform for Youth

BACKGROUND: All youth are susceptible to mental health issues and engaging in risky behavior, and for youth with chronic health conditions, the consequences can be more significant than in their healthy peers. Standardized paper-based questionnaires are recommended by the American Academy of Pediatr...

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Autores principales: Whitehouse, Sandy R, Lam, Pei-Yoong, Balka, Ellen, McLellan, Shelagh, Deevska, Mariana, Penn, Daniel, Issenman, Robert, Paone, Mary
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications Inc. 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3806391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24140595
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/resprot.2865
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author Whitehouse, Sandy R
Lam, Pei-Yoong
Balka, Ellen
McLellan, Shelagh
Deevska, Mariana
Penn, Daniel
Issenman, Robert
Paone, Mary
author_facet Whitehouse, Sandy R
Lam, Pei-Yoong
Balka, Ellen
McLellan, Shelagh
Deevska, Mariana
Penn, Daniel
Issenman, Robert
Paone, Mary
author_sort Whitehouse, Sandy R
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: All youth are susceptible to mental health issues and engaging in risky behavior, and for youth with chronic health conditions, the consequences can be more significant than in their healthy peers. Standardized paper-based questionnaires are recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics in community practice to screen for health risks. In hospitals, psychosocial screening is traditionally undertaken using the Home Education, Eating, Activities, Drugs, Depression, Sex, Safety (HEEADDSS) interview. However, time constraints and patient/provider discomfort reduce implementation. We report findings from an eHealth initiative undertaken to improve uptake of psychosocial screening among youth. OBJECTIVE: Youth are sophisticated “technology natives.” Our objective was to leverage youth’s comfort with technology, creating a youth-friendly interactive mobile eHealth psychosocial screening tool, TickiT. Patients enter data into the mobile application prior to a clinician visit. Response data is recorded in a report, which generates alerts for clinicians, shifting the clinical focus from collecting information to focused management. Design goals included improving the patient experience, improving efficiency through electronic patient based data entry, and supporting the collection of aggregated data for research. METHODS: This paper describes the iterative design and evaluation processes undertaken to develop TickiT including co-creation processes, and a pilot study utilizing mixed qualitative and quantitative methods. A collaborative industry/academic partnership engaged stakeholders (youth, health care providers, and administrators) in the co-creation development process. An independent descriptive study conducted in 2 Canadian pediatric teaching hospitals evaluated the feasibility of the platform in both inpatient and ambulatory clinical settings, evaluating both providers and patient responses to the platform. RESULTS: The independent pilot feasibility study included 80 adolescents, 12-18 years, and 38 medical staff-residents, inpatient and outpatient pediatricians, and surgeons. Youth uptake was 99% (79/80), and survey completion 99% (78/79; 90 questions). Youth found it easy to understand (92%, 72/78), easy to use (92%, 72/78), and efficient (80%, 63/79 with completion rate < 10 minutes). Residents were most positive about the application and surgeons were least positive. All inpatient providers obtained new patient information. CONCLUSIONS: Co-creative design methodology with stakeholders was effective for informing design and development processes to leverage effective eHealth opportunities. Continuing stakeholder engagement has further fostered platform development. The platform has the potential to meet IHI Triple Aim goals. Clinical adaptation requires planning, training, and support for health care providers to adjust their practices.
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spelling pubmed-38063912013-10-24 Co-Creation With TickiT: Designing and Evaluating a Clinical eHealth Platform for Youth Whitehouse, Sandy R Lam, Pei-Yoong Balka, Ellen McLellan, Shelagh Deevska, Mariana Penn, Daniel Issenman, Robert Paone, Mary JMIR Res Protoc Original Paper BACKGROUND: All youth are susceptible to mental health issues and engaging in risky behavior, and for youth with chronic health conditions, the consequences can be more significant than in their healthy peers. Standardized paper-based questionnaires are recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics in community practice to screen for health risks. In hospitals, psychosocial screening is traditionally undertaken using the Home Education, Eating, Activities, Drugs, Depression, Sex, Safety (HEEADDSS) interview. However, time constraints and patient/provider discomfort reduce implementation. We report findings from an eHealth initiative undertaken to improve uptake of psychosocial screening among youth. OBJECTIVE: Youth are sophisticated “technology natives.” Our objective was to leverage youth’s comfort with technology, creating a youth-friendly interactive mobile eHealth psychosocial screening tool, TickiT. Patients enter data into the mobile application prior to a clinician visit. Response data is recorded in a report, which generates alerts for clinicians, shifting the clinical focus from collecting information to focused management. Design goals included improving the patient experience, improving efficiency through electronic patient based data entry, and supporting the collection of aggregated data for research. METHODS: This paper describes the iterative design and evaluation processes undertaken to develop TickiT including co-creation processes, and a pilot study utilizing mixed qualitative and quantitative methods. A collaborative industry/academic partnership engaged stakeholders (youth, health care providers, and administrators) in the co-creation development process. An independent descriptive study conducted in 2 Canadian pediatric teaching hospitals evaluated the feasibility of the platform in both inpatient and ambulatory clinical settings, evaluating both providers and patient responses to the platform. RESULTS: The independent pilot feasibility study included 80 adolescents, 12-18 years, and 38 medical staff-residents, inpatient and outpatient pediatricians, and surgeons. Youth uptake was 99% (79/80), and survey completion 99% (78/79; 90 questions). Youth found it easy to understand (92%, 72/78), easy to use (92%, 72/78), and efficient (80%, 63/79 with completion rate < 10 minutes). Residents were most positive about the application and surgeons were least positive. All inpatient providers obtained new patient information. CONCLUSIONS: Co-creative design methodology with stakeholders was effective for informing design and development processes to leverage effective eHealth opportunities. Continuing stakeholder engagement has further fostered platform development. The platform has the potential to meet IHI Triple Aim goals. Clinical adaptation requires planning, training, and support for health care providers to adjust their practices. JMIR Publications Inc. 2013-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3806391/ /pubmed/24140595 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/resprot.2865 Text en ©Sandy R Whitehouse, Pei-Yoong Lam, Ellen Balka, Shelagh McLellan, Mariana Deevska, Daniel Penn, Robert Issenman, Mary Paone. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (http://www.researchprotocols.org), 18.10.2013. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Research Protocols, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.researchprotocols.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Whitehouse, Sandy R
Lam, Pei-Yoong
Balka, Ellen
McLellan, Shelagh
Deevska, Mariana
Penn, Daniel
Issenman, Robert
Paone, Mary
Co-Creation With TickiT: Designing and Evaluating a Clinical eHealth Platform for Youth
title Co-Creation With TickiT: Designing and Evaluating a Clinical eHealth Platform for Youth
title_full Co-Creation With TickiT: Designing and Evaluating a Clinical eHealth Platform for Youth
title_fullStr Co-Creation With TickiT: Designing and Evaluating a Clinical eHealth Platform for Youth
title_full_unstemmed Co-Creation With TickiT: Designing and Evaluating a Clinical eHealth Platform for Youth
title_short Co-Creation With TickiT: Designing and Evaluating a Clinical eHealth Platform for Youth
title_sort co-creation with tickit: designing and evaluating a clinical ehealth platform for youth
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3806391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24140595
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/resprot.2865
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