家长发烧应用程序:德国儿科发烧管理的多语言和社会责任方法

Yvonne Beerenbrock, E. Jenetzky, David D. Martin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要 政策制定者和从业人员越来越重视实现健康公平和满足不同人群(包括儿童等弱势群体)的特殊健康需求。为应对这些挑战,"家长发烧应用程序 "应运而生,它通过实时数据收集和全面的教育支持,改善儿童发烧管理,从而指导家长应对处理儿童发烧的复杂问题。这种系统化的方法旨在减少不必要的医疗干预和抗生素的过度使用,从而提高儿科护理的整体质量,减轻家长的焦虑。在德国,几乎每两个 0-10 岁的儿童中就有一个具有移民身份和/或移民经历。这意味着,这些儿童的家长也需要成为发烧管理的目标,并了解发烧时的正确行为。我们还将对这些信息进行匿名监测,以提供家长对菜单导航和信息设计体验的反馈回路。发烧应用程序为家长提供了一个结构化的、循序渐进的指南,帮助他们准确跟踪孩子的体温和药物摄入量,从而鼓励他们遵守既定的发烧管理方案。本研究探讨了 FeverApp 如何通过多语种和结合用户反馈的数字开发阶段来体现社会责任原则。它说明了为什么这款应用可以成为一种资源,通过在医学教育和实践中对家长承担社会责任来促进健康公平,同时也说明了在应用开发的不同阶段需要为来自不同文化背景的家长考虑哪些障碍,以便通过应用实现非正式的医学学习。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
FeverApp for Parents: A Multilingual and Socially Accountable Approach to Paediatric Fever Management in Germany
ABSTRACT Policymakers and practitioners are increasingly focused on achieving health equity and meeting the specific health needs of diverse populations, including vulnerable groups such as children. To address these challenges, the Fever App for Parents has emerged as a solution to guide parents through the complexities of managing fever in their children by improving fever management in children through real-time data collection and comprehensive educational support. This systematic approach aims to reduce unnecessary medical interventions and overuse of antibiotics, thereby improving the overall quality of pediatric care and reducing parental anxiety. In Germany, almost every second child aged 0-10 is a child with migration status and/or migration experience. This means that the parents of these children also need to be targeted in fever management and informed about the correct behavior in case of fever. This information will also be monitored anonymously to provide a feedback loop on the parent’s experience with the menu navigation and information design. The FeverApp provides parents with a structured, step-by-step guide to accurately track their child’s temperature and medication intake to encourage adherence to established fever management protocols. This study examines how the FeverApp embodies the principles of social responsibility through its multilingualism and digital development stages that incorporate user feedback. It shows why this app can be a resource to promote health equity through social responsibility in medical education and practice for parents, but also what barriers need to be considered at different stages of app development for parents from different cultural backgrounds to enable informal medical learning through apps.
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