Employing user-centered design and education sciences to inform training of diabetes survival skills

IF 4.2 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Patients newly diagnosed with diabetes mellitus (diabetes), who require insulin must acquire diabetes “survival” skills prior to discharge home. COVID-19 revealed considerable limitations of traditional in-person, time-intensive delivery of diabetes education and survival skills training (diabetes survival skills training). Furthermore, diabetes survival skills training has not been designed to meet the specific learning needs of patients with diabetes and their caregivers, particularly if delivered by telehealth. The objective of the study was to identify and understand the needs of users (patients newly prescribed insulin and their caregivers) to inform the design of a diabetes survival skills training, specifically for telehealth delivery, through the application of user-centered design and adult learning and education principles.

Methods

Users included patients newly prescribed insulin, their caregivers, and laypersons without diabetes. In semi-structured interviews, users were asked about experienced or perceived challenges in learning diabetes survival skills. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed. Investigators performed iterative rounds of coding of interview transcripts utilizing a constant comparative method to identify themes describing the dominant challenges users experienced. Themes were then mapped to adult learning and education principles to identify novel educational design solutions that can be applied to telehealth-based learning.

Results

We interviewed 18 users: patients (N = 6, 33 %), caregivers (N = 4, 22 %), and laypersons (N = 8, 44 %). Users consistently described challenges in understanding diabetes survival skills while hospitalized; in preparing needed supplies to execute diabetes survival skills; and in executing diabetes survival skills at home. The challenges mapped to three educational strategies: (1) spiral learning; (2) repetitive goal directed practice and feedback, which have the potential to translate into design solutions supporting remote/virtual learning; and (3) form fits function organizer, which supports safe organization and use of supplies to execute diabetes survival skills independently.

Conclusion

Learning complex tasks, such as diabetes survival skills, requires time, repetition, and continued support. The combination of a user-centered design approach to uncover learning needs as well as identification of relevant adult learning and education principles could inform the design of more user-centered, feasible, effective, and sustainable diabetes survival skills training for telehealth delivery.

运用以用户为中心的设计和教育科学为糖尿病生存技能培训提供依据
背景新诊断出需要使用胰岛素的糖尿病(糖尿病)患者在出院回家之前必须掌握糖尿病 "生存 "技能。COVID-19 显示,传统的面对面、时间密集型糖尿病教育和生存技能培训(糖尿病生存技能培训)存在相当大的局限性。此外,糖尿病生存技能培训的设计并不能满足糖尿病患者及其护理人员的特殊学习需求,尤其是通过远程医疗提供的培训。本研究的目的是确定和了解用户(新开胰岛素处方的患者及其护理人员)的需求,通过应用以用户为中心的设计和成人学习与教育原则,为设计专门用于远程医疗的糖尿病生存技能培训提供参考。在半结构化访谈中,我们询问了用户在学习糖尿病生存技能时遇到的或感知到的挑战。访谈进行了录音和转录。研究人员利用恒定比较法对访谈记录进行了多轮编码,以确定描述用户所经历的主要挑战的主题。然后将主题与成人学习和教育原则进行映射,以确定可应用于基于远程保健的学习的新型教育设计方案。结果我们采访了 18 位用户:患者(6 人,33%)、护理人员(4 人,22%)和非专业人员(8 人,44%)。用户一致描述了在住院期间理解糖尿病生存技能、准备执行糖尿病生存技能所需的用品以及在家中执行糖尿病生存技能所面临的挑战。这些挑战与三种教育策略相对应:(1) 螺旋式学习;(2) 目标导向的重复练习和反馈,这有可能转化为支持远程/虚拟学习的设计解决方案;(3) 形式与功能相匹配的组织器,它支持安全组织和使用用品,以独立执行糖尿病生存技能。结合以用户为中心的设计方法来发掘学习需求,并确定相关的成人学习和教育原则,可以为设计出更多以用户为中心、可行、有效和可持续的远程医疗糖尿病生存技能培训提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
16 weeks
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