痴呆症患者的技术可用性:概念分析。

IF 5 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
JMIR Aging Pub Date : 2024-07-03 DOI:10.2196/51987
Shao-Yun Chien, Oleg Zaslavsky, Clara Berridge
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:可用性是衡量技术产品品质的关键指标。随着技术的进步,痴呆症患者的潜在使用率也在不断提高。然而,确定技术对痴呆症患者的可用性仍然是一项持续的挑战。痴呆症的多样性和渐进性为制定通用可用性标准增添了复杂性,突出了集中审议的必要性。技术干预为痴呆症患者和护理人员提供了潜在的益处。在 COVID-19 中,技术在医疗保健服务中的作用越来越大,尤其是在老年人中。要让不同的痴呆症患者都能享受到技术带来的益处,就必须特别关注他们的需求、愿望、能力以及容易受到技术潜在伤害的弱点。成功的痴呆症技术干预需要对技术的可用性进行细致的考虑:本概念分析旨在研究痴呆症患者的技术可用性,从而为这一特殊人群的可用性确立一个明确的定义:方法:沃克(Walker)和阿凡特(Avant)的框架被用来指导此次概念分析。我们使用 "技术可用性 "和 "痴呆症 "这两个关键词,通过PubMed、Web of Science和谷歌学术数据库,对1984年至2024年间有关痴呆症患者的技术可用性进行了文献综述。我们还纳入了临床定义,并整合了由轻度阿尔茨海默痴呆症患者及其各自护理伙伴组成的 29 个二人组的访谈数据,最终得出了 58 位老年人的数据。这种方法旨在更全面地描述痴呆症患者的可用性需求,强调实际应用:结果:文献综述显示,可用性包括可接受的可学习性、效率和满意度等属性。痴呆症阶段、亚型和症状的临床视角强调了量身定制技术可用性评估的重要性。来自 29 个家庭的反馈还强调了简洁性、清晰的导航、年龄敏感设计、个性化功能和音频支持的价值。因此,设计应优先考虑为痴呆症患者提供个性化的帮助,摒弃标准化的技术方法。综合各种来源,为痴呆症患者定义的可用性属性不仅包括有效性、效率和满意度等一般可用性属性,还包括其他关键因素:适应性、个性化、直观性和简易性,以确保技术对这一人群具有支持作用并产生切实的益处:在设计技术干预措施时,可用性对痴呆症患者至关重要。它要求了解用户特征、痴呆症阶段、症状、需求和任务,并考虑不同的生理需求、潜在的感官损失以及与年龄相关的变化。疾病的发展需要适应不断变化的症状。建议包括多用途、多功能的技术设计;满足不同的需求;调整软件功能以实现个性化。产品功能分类可根据用户情况灵活调整。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Technology Usability for People Living With Dementia: Concept Analysis.

Background: Usability is a key indicator of the quality of technology products. In tandem with technological advancements, potential use by individuals with dementia is increasing. However, defining the usability of technology for individuals with dementia remains an ongoing challenge. The diverse and progressive nature of dementia adds complexity to the creation of universal usability criteria, highlighting the need for focused deliberations. Technological interventions offer potential benefits for people living with dementia and caregivers. Amid COVID-19, technology's role in health care access is growing, especially among older adults. Enabling the diverse population of people living with dementia to enjoy the benefits of technologies requires particular attention to their needs, desires, capabilities, and vulnerabilities to potential harm from technologies. Successful technological interventions for dementia require meticulous consideration of technology usability.

Objective: This concept analysis aims to examine the usability of technology in the context of individuals living with dementia to establish a clear definition for usability within this specific demographic.

Methods: The framework by Walker and Avant was used to guide this concept analysis. We conducted a literature review spanning 1984 to 2024, exploring technology usability for people with dementia through the PubMed, Web of Science, and Google Scholar databases using the keywords "technology usability" and "dementia." We also incorporated clinical definitions and integrated interview data from 29 dyads comprising individuals with mild Alzheimer dementia and their respective care partners, resulting in a total of 58 older adults. This approach aimed to offer a more comprehensive portrayal of the usability needs of individuals living with dementia, emphasizing practical application.

Results: The evidence from the literature review unveiled that usability encompasses attributes such as acceptable learnability, efficiency, and satisfaction. The clinical perspective on dementia stages, subtypes, and symptoms underscores the importance of tailored technology usability assessment. Feedback from 29 dyads also emphasized the value of simplicity, clear navigation, age-sensitive design, personalized features, and audio support. Thus, design should prioritize personalized assistance for individuals living with dementia, moving away from standardized technological approaches. Synthesized from various sources, the defined usability attributes for individuals living with dementia not only encompass the general usability properties of effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction but also include other key factors: adaptability, personalization, intuitiveness, and simplicity, to ensure that technology is supportive and yields tangible benefits for this demographic.

Conclusions: Usability is crucial for people living with dementia when designing technological interventions. It necessitates an understanding of user characteristics, dementia stages, symptoms, needs, and tasks, as well as consideration of varied physical requirements, potential sensory loss, and age-related changes. Disease progression requires adapting to evolving symptoms. Recommendations include versatile, multifunctional technology designs; accommodating diverse needs; and adjusting software functionalities for personalization. Product feature classification can be flexible based on user conditions.

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来源期刊
JMIR Aging
JMIR Aging Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.10%
发文量
71
审稿时长
12 weeks
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