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Iterative Adaptation of a Tuberculosis Digital Medication Adherence Technology to Meet User Needs: Qualitative Study of Patients and Health Care Providers Using Human-Centered Design Methods

BACKGROUND: Digital adherence technologies have been widely promoted as a means to improve tuberculosis medication adherence. However, uptake of these technologies has been suboptimal by both patients and health workers. Not surprisingly, studies have not demonstrated significant improvement in trea...

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Autores principales: Patel, Devika, Berger, Christopher Allen, Kityamuwesi, Alex, Ggita, Joseph, Kunihira Tinka, Lynn, Turimumahoro, Patricia, Feler, Joshua, Chehab, Lara, Chen, Amy Z, Gupta, Nakull, Turyahabwe, Stavia, Katamba, Achilles, Cattamanchi, Adithya, Sammann, Amanda
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7755538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33289494
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/19270
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author Patel, Devika
Berger, Christopher Allen
Kityamuwesi, Alex
Ggita, Joseph
Kunihira Tinka, Lynn
Turimumahoro, Patricia
Feler, Joshua
Chehab, Lara
Chen, Amy Z
Gupta, Nakull
Turyahabwe, Stavia
Katamba, Achilles
Cattamanchi, Adithya
Sammann, Amanda
author_facet Patel, Devika
Berger, Christopher Allen
Kityamuwesi, Alex
Ggita, Joseph
Kunihira Tinka, Lynn
Turimumahoro, Patricia
Feler, Joshua
Chehab, Lara
Chen, Amy Z
Gupta, Nakull
Turyahabwe, Stavia
Katamba, Achilles
Cattamanchi, Adithya
Sammann, Amanda
author_sort Patel, Devika
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Digital adherence technologies have been widely promoted as a means to improve tuberculosis medication adherence. However, uptake of these technologies has been suboptimal by both patients and health workers. Not surprisingly, studies have not demonstrated significant improvement in treatment outcomes. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to optimize a well-known digital adherence technology, 99DOTS, for end user needs in Uganda. We describe the findings of the ideation phase of the human-centered design methodology to adapt 99DOTS according to a set of design principles identified in the previous inspiration phase. METHODS: 99DOTS is a low-cost digital adherence technology wherein tuberculosis medication blister packs are encased within an envelope that reveals toll-free numbers that patients can call to report dosing. We identified 2 key areas for design and testing: (1) the envelope, including the form factor, content, and depiction of the order of pill taking; and (2) the patient call-in experience. We conducted 5 brainstorming sessions with all relevant stakeholders to generate a suite of potential prototype concepts. Senior investigators identified concepts to further develop based on feasibility and consistency with the predetermined design principles. Prototypes were revised with feedback from the entire team. The envelope and call-in experience prototypes were tested and iteratively revised through focus groups with health workers (n=52) and interviews with patients (n=7). We collected and analyzed qualitative feedback to inform each subsequent iteration. RESULTS: The 5 brainstorming sessions produced 127 unique ideas that we clustered into 6 themes: rewards, customization, education, logistics, wording and imagery, and treatment countdown. We developed 16 envelope prototypes, 12 icons, and 28 audio messages for prototype testing. In the final design, we altered the pill packaging envelope by adding a front flap to conceal the pills and reduce potential stigma associated with tuberculosis. The flap was adorned with either a blank calendar or map of Uganda. The inside cover contained a personalized message from a local health worker including contact information, pictorial pill-taking instructions, and a choice of stickers to tailor education to the patient and phase of treatment. Pill-taking order was indicated with colors, chevron arrows, and small mobile phone icons. Last, the call-in experience when patients report dosing was changed to a rotating series of audio messages centered on the themes of prevention, encouragement, and reassurance that tuberculosis is curable. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrated the use of human-centered design as a promising tool to drive the adaptation of digital adherence technologies to better address the needs and motivations of end users. The next phase of research, known as the implementation phase in the human-centered design methodology, will investigate whether the adapted 99DOTS platform results in higher levels of engagement from patients and health workers, and ultimately improves tuberculosis treatment outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-77555382020-12-31 Iterative Adaptation of a Tuberculosis Digital Medication Adherence Technology to Meet User Needs: Qualitative Study of Patients and Health Care Providers Using Human-Centered Design Methods Patel, Devika Berger, Christopher Allen Kityamuwesi, Alex Ggita, Joseph Kunihira Tinka, Lynn Turimumahoro, Patricia Feler, Joshua Chehab, Lara Chen, Amy Z Gupta, Nakull Turyahabwe, Stavia Katamba, Achilles Cattamanchi, Adithya Sammann, Amanda JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Digital adherence technologies have been widely promoted as a means to improve tuberculosis medication adherence. However, uptake of these technologies has been suboptimal by both patients and health workers. Not surprisingly, studies have not demonstrated significant improvement in treatment outcomes. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to optimize a well-known digital adherence technology, 99DOTS, for end user needs in Uganda. We describe the findings of the ideation phase of the human-centered design methodology to adapt 99DOTS according to a set of design principles identified in the previous inspiration phase. METHODS: 99DOTS is a low-cost digital adherence technology wherein tuberculosis medication blister packs are encased within an envelope that reveals toll-free numbers that patients can call to report dosing. We identified 2 key areas for design and testing: (1) the envelope, including the form factor, content, and depiction of the order of pill taking; and (2) the patient call-in experience. We conducted 5 brainstorming sessions with all relevant stakeholders to generate a suite of potential prototype concepts. Senior investigators identified concepts to further develop based on feasibility and consistency with the predetermined design principles. Prototypes were revised with feedback from the entire team. The envelope and call-in experience prototypes were tested and iteratively revised through focus groups with health workers (n=52) and interviews with patients (n=7). We collected and analyzed qualitative feedback to inform each subsequent iteration. RESULTS: The 5 brainstorming sessions produced 127 unique ideas that we clustered into 6 themes: rewards, customization, education, logistics, wording and imagery, and treatment countdown. We developed 16 envelope prototypes, 12 icons, and 28 audio messages for prototype testing. In the final design, we altered the pill packaging envelope by adding a front flap to conceal the pills and reduce potential stigma associated with tuberculosis. The flap was adorned with either a blank calendar or map of Uganda. The inside cover contained a personalized message from a local health worker including contact information, pictorial pill-taking instructions, and a choice of stickers to tailor education to the patient and phase of treatment. Pill-taking order was indicated with colors, chevron arrows, and small mobile phone icons. Last, the call-in experience when patients report dosing was changed to a rotating series of audio messages centered on the themes of prevention, encouragement, and reassurance that tuberculosis is curable. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrated the use of human-centered design as a promising tool to drive the adaptation of digital adherence technologies to better address the needs and motivations of end users. The next phase of research, known as the implementation phase in the human-centered design methodology, will investigate whether the adapted 99DOTS platform results in higher levels of engagement from patients and health workers, and ultimately improves tuberculosis treatment outcomes. JMIR Publications 2020-12-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7755538/ /pubmed/33289494 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/19270 Text en ©Devika Patel, Christopher Allen Berger, Alex Kityamuwesi, Joseph Ggita, Lynn Kunihira Tinka, Patricia Turimumahoro, Joshua Feler, Lara Chehab, Amy Z Chen, Nakull Gupta, Stavia Turyahabwe, Achilles Katamba, Adithya Cattamanchi, Amanda Sammann. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (http://formative.jmir.org), 08.12.2020. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Patel, Devika
Berger, Christopher Allen
Kityamuwesi, Alex
Ggita, Joseph
Kunihira Tinka, Lynn
Turimumahoro, Patricia
Feler, Joshua
Chehab, Lara
Chen, Amy Z
Gupta, Nakull
Turyahabwe, Stavia
Katamba, Achilles
Cattamanchi, Adithya
Sammann, Amanda
Iterative Adaptation of a Tuberculosis Digital Medication Adherence Technology to Meet User Needs: Qualitative Study of Patients and Health Care Providers Using Human-Centered Design Methods
title Iterative Adaptation of a Tuberculosis Digital Medication Adherence Technology to Meet User Needs: Qualitative Study of Patients and Health Care Providers Using Human-Centered Design Methods
title_full Iterative Adaptation of a Tuberculosis Digital Medication Adherence Technology to Meet User Needs: Qualitative Study of Patients and Health Care Providers Using Human-Centered Design Methods
title_fullStr Iterative Adaptation of a Tuberculosis Digital Medication Adherence Technology to Meet User Needs: Qualitative Study of Patients and Health Care Providers Using Human-Centered Design Methods
title_full_unstemmed Iterative Adaptation of a Tuberculosis Digital Medication Adherence Technology to Meet User Needs: Qualitative Study of Patients and Health Care Providers Using Human-Centered Design Methods
title_short Iterative Adaptation of a Tuberculosis Digital Medication Adherence Technology to Meet User Needs: Qualitative Study of Patients and Health Care Providers Using Human-Centered Design Methods
title_sort iterative adaptation of a tuberculosis digital medication adherence technology to meet user needs: qualitative study of patients and health care providers using human-centered design methods
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7755538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33289494
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/19270
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