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1.
PEC Innov ; 4: 100280, 2024 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38596601

RESUMO

Objective: Hospital-to-home (H2H) transitions challenge families of children with medical complexity (CMC) and healthcare professionals (HCP). This study aimed to gain deeper insights into the H2H transition process and to work towards eHealth interventions for its improvement, by applying an iterative methodology involving both CMC families and HCP as end-users. Methods: For 20-weeks, the Dutch Transitional Care Unit consortium collaborated with the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, HCP, and CMC families. The agile SCREAM approach was used, merging Design Thinking methods into five iterative sprints to stimulate creativity, ideation, and design. Continuous communication allowed rapid adaptation to new information and the refinement of solutions for subsequent sprints. Results: This iterative process revealed three domains of care - care coordination, social wellbeing, and emotional support - that were important to all stakeholders. These domains informed the development of our final prototype, 'Our Care Team', an application tailored to meet the H2H transition needs for CMC families and HCP. Conclusion: Complex processes like the H2H transition for CMC families require adaptive interventions that empower all stakeholders in their respective roles, to promote transitional care that is anticipatory, rather than reactive. Innovation: A collaborative methodology is needed, that optimizes existing resources and knowledge, fosters innovation through collaboration while using creative digital design principles. This way, we might be able to design eHealth solutions with end-users, not just for them.

2.
Int J Adolesc Med Health ; 22(2): 307-20, 2010.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21061933

RESUMO

The purpose of this article is to develop a context-based and identity-centered perspective on help-seeking. Recent approaches have indicated the inability of conventional models of help-seeking to account for the non-utilization of health care services in situations for which services, resources and information are adequately provided. We address this non-utilization from a perspective that explores the interactions between notions of health, illness, and identity formation, especially in highly transitional situations in which people are confused about their identity and sense of belonging. More specifically, we explore the non-utilization of health care services by Dutch university students. The results of 36 in-depth interviews show that the help-seeking behaviors of university students are closely associated with questions about identity, forms of agency, and styles of self-presentation, and are deeply influenced by the uncertain social and cultural context in which students are inserted. For example, being a 'normal' student was often regarded as more important than solving health problems, and stress was repeatedly portrayed as a constant and inevitable condition of everyday student life, giving a common language to express the burdens of the shared student experience. Some students even romanticized health problems. Eventually students with serious health problems avoided accessing health services.


Assuntos
Aceitação pelo Paciente de Cuidados de Saúde/psicologia , Psicologia do Adolescente , Identificação Social , Serviços de Saúde para Estudantes/estatística & dados numéricos , Estudantes/psicologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Países Baixos , Adulto Jovem
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