在资源有限的环境中敏捷开发用于围产期监护的智能手机应用程序。

Boris Martinez, Rachel Hall-Clifford, Enma Coyote, Lisa Stroux, Camilo E Valderrama, Christopher Aaron, Aaron Francis, Cate Hendren, Peter Rohloff, Gari D Clifford
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引用次数: 0

摘要

技术有可能增强培训和文化水平较低的一线医疗工作者的能力,特别是在中低收入国家。实现这一目标的一个显而易见的平台就是智能手机,它成本低,几乎无处不在,拥有良好的供应链基础设施,其使用在文化上也被普遍接受。特别是,智能手机为通过主动视听辅助工具向文盲或未受过培训的用户提供增强或程序信息提供了机会,正如本文所述。本文介绍了智能手机应用原型的改进和迭代设计过程,该应用原型旨在为危地马拉农村地区文化水平和技术接触水平较低的玛雅土著非专业助产士提供围产期监测支持。在对该系统的可行性进行试点调查后,启动了一个为期两年的项目,以开发一个强大的现场系统,最终对该系统进行了随机对照试验,试验正在进行中。开发工作要求采用敏捷方法,开发团队既要在远程工作,也要在国内工作,与助产士终端用户密切合作,找出并解决关键的技术和文化问题。本文介绍了这一过程和中期成果。应用原型分两个阶段进行了改进,最终用户的数量也在不断扩大。在开发周期中发现了系统的一些关键弱点,如用户在插入和组装电缆以及与一维超声波记录界面交互时出现错误,以及中央医疗设施的数据上传带宽意外不足。针对这些问题开发了安全网,最终系统得到了最终用户的广泛认可和高度使用。为了评估该系统在全面实地部署后的有效性,对数据质量、随着时间推移的损坏情况、系统的一般使用情况以及国内团队为最终用户提供应用支持的需求量进行了分析。通过对数据质量的反复审查和对用户反馈意见的持续利用,高质量记录的数量和百分比逐月增加。关于该系统对产科转诊量以及孕产妇和新生儿临床结果的影响的最终分析,有待正在进行的临床试验结束。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Agile Development of a Smartphone App for Perinatal Monitoring in a Resource-Constrained Setting.

Agile Development of a Smartphone App for Perinatal Monitoring in a Resource-Constrained Setting.

Agile Development of a Smartphone App for Perinatal Monitoring in a Resource-Constrained Setting.

Agile Development of a Smartphone App for Perinatal Monitoring in a Resource-Constrained Setting.

Technology provides the potential to empower frontline healthcare workers with low levels of training and literacy, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. An obvious platform for achieving this aim is the smartphone, a low cost, almost ubiquitous device with good supply chain infrastructure and a general cultural acceptance for its use. In particular, the smartphone offers the opportunity to provide augmented or procedural information through active audiovisual aids to illiterate or untrained users, as described in this article. In this article, the process of refinement and iterative design of a smartphone application prototype to support perinatal surveillance in rural Guatemala for indigenous Maya lay midwives with low levels of literacy and technology exposure is described. Following on from a pilot to investigate the feasibility of this system, a two-year project to develop a robust in-field system was initiated, culminating in a randomized controlled trial of the system, which is ongoing. The development required an agile approach, with the development team working both remotely and in country to identify and solve key technical and cultural issues in close collaboration with the midwife end-users. This article describes this process and intermediate results. The application prototype was refined in two phases, with expanding numbers of end-users. Some of the key weaknesses identified in the system during the development cycles were user error when inserting and assembling cables and interacting with the 1-D ultrasound-recording interface, as well as unexpectedly poor bandwidth for data uploads in the central healthcare facility. Safety nets for these issues were developed and the resultant system was well accepted and highly utilized by the end-users. To evaluate the effectiveness of the system after full field deployment, data quality, and corruption over time, as well as general usage of the system and the volume of application support for end-users required by the in-country team was analyzed. Through iterative review of data quality and consistent use of user feedback, the volume and percentage of high quality recordings was increased monthly. Final analysis of the impact of the system on obstetrical referral volume and maternal and neonatal clinical outcomes is pending conclusion of the ongoing clinical trial.

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