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Alternative Ultrasound Gel for a Sustainable Ultrasound Program: Application of Human Centered Design

This paper describes design of a low cost, ultrasound gel from local products applying aspects of Human Centered Design methodology. A multidisciplinary team worked with clinicians who use ultrasound where commercial gel is cost prohibitive and scarce. The team followed the format outlined in the Id...

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Autores principales: Salmon, Margaret, Salmon, Christian, Bissinger, Alexa, Muller, Mundenga Mutendi, Gebreyesus, Alegnta, Geremew, Haimanot, Wendell, Sarah, Azaza, Aklilu, Salumu, Maurice, Benfield, Nerys
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4529075/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26252003
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134332
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author Salmon, Margaret
Salmon, Christian
Bissinger, Alexa
Muller, Mundenga Mutendi
Gebreyesus, Alegnta
Geremew, Haimanot
Wendell, Sarah
Azaza, Aklilu
Salumu, Maurice
Benfield, Nerys
author_facet Salmon, Margaret
Salmon, Christian
Bissinger, Alexa
Muller, Mundenga Mutendi
Gebreyesus, Alegnta
Geremew, Haimanot
Wendell, Sarah
Azaza, Aklilu
Salumu, Maurice
Benfield, Nerys
author_sort Salmon, Margaret
collection PubMed
description This paper describes design of a low cost, ultrasound gel from local products applying aspects of Human Centered Design methodology. A multidisciplinary team worked with clinicians who use ultrasound where commercial gel is cost prohibitive and scarce. The team followed the format outlined in the Ideo Took Kit. Research began by defining the challenge "how to create locally available alternative ultrasound gel for a low-resourced environment? The "End-Users," were identified as clinicians who use ultrasound in Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia. An expert group was identified and queried for possible alternatives to commercial gel. Responses included shampoo, oils, water and cornstarch. Cornstarch, while a reasonable solution, was either not available or too expensive. We then sought deeper knowledge of locally sources materials from local experts, market vendors, to develop a similar product. Suggested solutions gleaned from these interviews were collected and used to create ultrasound gel accounting for cost, image quality, manufacturing capability. Initial prototypes used cassava root flour from Great Lakes Region (DRC, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania) and West Africa, and bula from Ethiopia. Prototypes were tested in the field and resulting images evaluated by our user group. A final prototype was then selected. Cassava and bula at a 32 part water, 8 part flour and 4 part salt, heated, mixed then cooled was the product design of choice.
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spelling pubmed-45290752015-08-12 Alternative Ultrasound Gel for a Sustainable Ultrasound Program: Application of Human Centered Design Salmon, Margaret Salmon, Christian Bissinger, Alexa Muller, Mundenga Mutendi Gebreyesus, Alegnta Geremew, Haimanot Wendell, Sarah Azaza, Aklilu Salumu, Maurice Benfield, Nerys PLoS One Research Article This paper describes design of a low cost, ultrasound gel from local products applying aspects of Human Centered Design methodology. A multidisciplinary team worked with clinicians who use ultrasound where commercial gel is cost prohibitive and scarce. The team followed the format outlined in the Ideo Took Kit. Research began by defining the challenge "how to create locally available alternative ultrasound gel for a low-resourced environment? The "End-Users," were identified as clinicians who use ultrasound in Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia. An expert group was identified and queried for possible alternatives to commercial gel. Responses included shampoo, oils, water and cornstarch. Cornstarch, while a reasonable solution, was either not available or too expensive. We then sought deeper knowledge of locally sources materials from local experts, market vendors, to develop a similar product. Suggested solutions gleaned from these interviews were collected and used to create ultrasound gel accounting for cost, image quality, manufacturing capability. Initial prototypes used cassava root flour from Great Lakes Region (DRC, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania) and West Africa, and bula from Ethiopia. Prototypes were tested in the field and resulting images evaluated by our user group. A final prototype was then selected. Cassava and bula at a 32 part water, 8 part flour and 4 part salt, heated, mixed then cooled was the product design of choice. Public Library of Science 2015-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4529075/ /pubmed/26252003 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134332 Text en © 2015 Salmon et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Salmon, Margaret
Salmon, Christian
Bissinger, Alexa
Muller, Mundenga Mutendi
Gebreyesus, Alegnta
Geremew, Haimanot
Wendell, Sarah
Azaza, Aklilu
Salumu, Maurice
Benfield, Nerys
Alternative Ultrasound Gel for a Sustainable Ultrasound Program: Application of Human Centered Design
title Alternative Ultrasound Gel for a Sustainable Ultrasound Program: Application of Human Centered Design
title_full Alternative Ultrasound Gel for a Sustainable Ultrasound Program: Application of Human Centered Design
title_fullStr Alternative Ultrasound Gel for a Sustainable Ultrasound Program: Application of Human Centered Design
title_full_unstemmed Alternative Ultrasound Gel for a Sustainable Ultrasound Program: Application of Human Centered Design
title_short Alternative Ultrasound Gel for a Sustainable Ultrasound Program: Application of Human Centered Design
title_sort alternative ultrasound gel for a sustainable ultrasound program: application of human centered design
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4529075/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26252003
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134332
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