Implementation Science Meets Software Development to Create eHealth Components for an Integrated Care Model for Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation Facilitated by eHealth: The SMILe Study as an Example
Autor: | Stefan Pschenitza, SMILe study team, Sabina De Geest, Dennis Rockstein, Viktor Werlitz, Lynn Leppla, Sabine Valenta, Alexandra Teynor, Sandra Hobelsberger, Phillip Heidegger |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Male
Process management Computer science Nursing 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine integrated care model user‐ eHealth Humans 030212 general & internal medicine General Nursing User-centered design Implementation Science implementation science Science & Technology 030504 nursing business.industry Delivery of Health Care Integrated User story Software development Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation Usability centered design Middle Aged Telemedicine Integrated care Transplantation Models Organizational Female 0305 other medical science business Agile software development Life Sciences & Biomedicine Software |
Popis: | PURPOSE: To describe a process of creating eHealth components for an integrated care model using an agile software development approach, user-centered design and, via the Behavior Change Wheel, behavior theory-guided content development. Following the principles of implementation science and using the SMILe project (integrated care model for allogeneic stem cell transplantation facilitated by eHealth) as an example, this study demonstrates how to narrow the research-to-practice gap often encountered in eHealth projects. METHODS: We followed a four-step process: (a) formation of an interdisciplinary team; (b) a contextual analysis to drive the development process via behavioral theory; (c) transfer of content to software following agile software development principles; and (d) frequent stakeholder and end user involvement following user-centered design principles. FINDINGS: Our newly developed comprehensive development approach allowed us to create a running eHealth component and embed it in an integrated care model. An interdisciplinary team's collaboration at specified interaction points supported clear, timely communication and interactions between the specialists. Because behavioral theory drove the content development process, we formulated user stories to define the software features, which were prioritized and iteratively developed using agile software development principles. A prototype intervention module has now been developed and received high ratings on the System Usability Scale after two rounds of usability testing. CONCLUSIONS: Following an agile software development process, structured collaboration between nursing scientists and software specialists allowed our interdisciplinary team to develop meaningful, theory-based eHealth components adapted to context-specific needs. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The creation of high-quality, accurately fitting eHealth components specifically to be embedded in integrated care models should increase the chances of uptake, adoption, and sustainable implementation in clinical practice. ispartof: JOURNAL OF NURSING SCHOLARSHIP vol:53 issue:1 pages:35-45 ispartof: location:United States status: published |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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