建立一个分散的生物银行应用程序的研究透明度和患者参与:参与式设计研究。

IF 2.6 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
JMIR Human Factors Pub Date : 2025-03-05 DOI:10.2196/59485
Ananya Dewan, M Eifler, Amelia Hood, William Sanchez, Marielle Gross
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:患者来源的生物标本是生物医学研究的宝贵工具。目前,没有机制可以让患者跟进并了解其捐赠样本的使用情况。将患者纳入利益相关者并有意义地让他们参与生物医学研究首先需要研究活动的透明度。目的:在本文中,我们描述了使用参与式设计方法来构建一个分散的生物银行“de-bi”移动应用程序,患者可以通过覆盖机构生物银行数据库的患者友好界面了解生物银行,跟踪他们的标本,并参与正在进行的研究,最初是为乳腺癌用例开发的。方法:本研究分两个阶段进行。在第一阶段,我们设计了应用程序屏幕,患者可以从中了解涉及他们样本的正在进行的研究。我们将这些屏幕嵌入到一项调查中(n=94),以评估患者对反馈类型和参与机会的兴趣;在6次全面随访访谈中对调查结果进行了调查。然后,我们举办了一个沉浸式的参与式设计研讨会,参与者(大约50人)就我们的方法提供了一般反馈,在一个嵌入式协同设计研讨会上,一个子集(n=15)就屏幕设计提供了有针对性的反馈。在第二阶段,我们改进了用户界面,并与机构利益相关者协商开发了功能性应用程序原型,以确保法规遵从性、工作流兼容性以及与本地数据架构的可组合性。我们在第二次研讨会上展示了这款应用,参与者(n=25,来自9个小组)分享了关于应用可用性和设计的想法。在这个阶段,我们进行了认知演练(n=13),以获得关于应用内任务导航的深入反馈。结果:大多数调查参与者(61/ 81,75%)对了解其标本的研究结果感兴趣,49%(41/83)对与具有相同诊断的其他人联系感兴趣。参与者(47/60,78%)对从使用其生物标本的科学家那里获得对患者友好的科学信息摘要表达了强烈的兴趣。第一次设计研讨会发现了术语和数据呈现方面的混乱(例如,9/15,60%的共同设计师不清楚“使用中的”生物标本),尽管许多人对查看个人生物标本的能力表示赞赏(7/15,47%),大多数人对与他人联系感到兴奋(12/15,80%)。在第二次研讨会中,所有小组都认为应用程序的信息很有价值。此外,44%(5/9)的受访者表示,他们不喜欢入职流程,这在认知演练中得到了呼应。浏览进一步证实了人们对生物标本追踪的兴趣,23%(3/13)的人对在应用程序中找不到任何生物标本感到困惑。这些发现指导了登录、设计和用户体验的改进。结论:设计一个面向患者的应用程序,显示生物样本的信息,可以提高生物医学研究的透明度和参与度。与患者利益相关者共同设计应用程序,确认了对生物标本和相关研究的兴趣,改进了数据的呈现,并确保应用程序的可用性,为试点研究做准备。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Building a Decentralized Biobanking App for Research Transparency and Patient Engagement: Participatory Design Study.

Background: Patient-derived biospecimens are invaluable tools in biomedical research. Currently, there are no mechanisms for patients to follow along and learn about the uses of their donated samples. Incorporating patients as stakeholders and meaningfully engaging them in biomedical research first requires transparency of research activities.

Objective: In this paper, we describe the use of participatory design methods to build a decentralized biobanking "de-bi" mobile app where patients could learn about biobanking, track their specimens, and engage with ongoing research via patient-friendly interfaces overlaying institutional biobank databases, initially developed for a breast cancer use case.

Methods: This research occurred in 2 phases. In phase 1, we designed app screens from which patients could learn about ongoing research involving their samples. We embedded these screens in a survey (n=94) to gauge patients' interests regarding types of feedback and engagement opportunities; survey responses were probed during 6 comprehensive follow-up interviews. We then held an immersive participatory design workshop where participants (approximately 50) provided general feedback about our approach, with an embedded codesign workshop where a subset (n=15) provided targeted feedback on screen designs. For phase 2, we refined user interfaces and developed a functional app prototype in consultation with institutional stakeholders to ensure regulatory compliance, workflow compatibility, and composability with local data architectures. We presented the app at a second workshop, where participants (n=25, across 9 groups) shared thoughts on the app's usability and design. In this phase, we conducted cognitive walkthroughs (n=13) to gain in-depth feedback on in-app task navigation.

Results: Most of the survey participants (61/81, 75%) were interested in learning the outcomes of research on their specimens, and 49% (41/83) were interested in connecting with others with the same diagnosis. Participants (47/60, 78%) expressed strong interest in receiving patient-friendly summaries of scientific information from scientists using their biospecimens. The first design workshop identified confusion in terminology and data presentation (eg, 9/15, 60% of co-designers were unclear on the biospecimens "in use"), though many appreciated the ability to view their personal biospecimens (7/15, 47%), and most were excited about connecting with others (12/15, 80%). In the second workshop, all groups found the app's information valuable. Moreover, 44% (5/9) noted they did not like the onboarding process, which was echoed in cognitive walkthroughs. Walkthroughs further confirmed interest in biospecimen tracking, and 23% (3/13) had confusion about not finding any of their biospecimens in the app. These findings guided refinements in onboarding, design, and user experience.

Conclusions: Designing a patient-facing app that displays information about biobanked specimens can facilitate greater transparency and engagement in biomedical research. Co-designing the app with patient stakeholders confirmed interest in learning about biospecimens and related research, improved presentation of data, and ensured usability of the app in preparation for a pilot study.

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来源期刊
JMIR Human Factors
JMIR Human Factors Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
3.70%
发文量
123
审稿时长
12 weeks
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