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Browsing by Author "Pratt, Wanda"
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Item Family Resiliance Technologies: Designing Collaborative Technologies for Caregiving Coordination in the Children's Hospital(2023-03) Nikkhah, Sarah; Miller, Andrew D.; Bolchini, Davide; Martin-Hammond, Aqueasha M.; Murillo, Angela P.; Pratt, WandaEach year, the parents of approximately 15,300 kids will hear the words “Your child has cancer.” Families with hospitalized children must process a lot of stress and play a vital role in their child’s care. Hospitalized children need care and assistance processing medical information and going through their treatment. Therefore, their families must take on new responsibilities such as providing care, processing medical information, getting ready for the extensive and sometimes painful treatments, and facing the fear of losing their child. They must also adjust their daily duties, chores, and jobs to provide care to their hospitalized child. Previous research on families with hospitalized children shows that a lower level of stress and a higher level of communication among family members are significant predictors of long-term health outcomes after hospitalization. Social work and family therapy studies researched family resilience as these families’ ability to process and handle stress as a system. However, few technologies are designed to increase family resilience and support the family’s communication and collaboration when a child is hospitalized. My aim in this dissertation is to understand how collaborative technologies can help family members of hospitalized children (family caregivers) collaborate and coordinate with each other during the stressful extended hospitalization period. Through qualitative interviews and elicitation activities followed by iterative cycles of design, I showed that Family Resilience can be used as a lens to understand families’ collaborative processes and guide the design of collaborative technologies to support these families in adapting when they are under stress, and their usual routines as a family are constantly changing due to their child’s hospitalization. Therefore, there is an opportunity for HCI and CSCW to design collaborative technology that supports family resilience processes for families facing a crisis, such as having a hospitalized child with cancer.Item Supporting Collaborative Health Tracking in the Hospital: Patients' Perspectives(Association for Computing Machinery, 2018-04-21) Mishra, Sonali R.; Miller, Andrew D.; Haldar, Shefali; Khelifi, Maher; Eschler, Jordan; Elera, Rashmi G.; Pollack, Ari H.; Pratt, Wanda; Human-Centered Computing, School of Informatics and ComputingThe hospital setting creates a high-stakes environment where patients' lives depend on accurate tracking of health data. Despite recent work emphasizing the importance of patients' engagement in their own health care, less is known about how patients track their health and care in the hospital. Through interviews and design probes, we investigated hospitalized patients' tracking activity and analyzed our results using the stage-based personal informatics model. We used this model to understand how to support the tracking needs of hospitalized patients at each stage. In this paper, we discuss hospitalized patients' needs for collaboratively tracking their health with their care team. We suggest future extensions of the stage-based model to accommodate collaborative tracking situations, such as hospitals, where data is collected, analyzed, and acted on by multiple people. Our findings uncover new directions for HCI research and highlight ways to support patients in tracking their care and improving patient safety.Item Supporting Collaborative Health Tracking in the Hospital: Patients’ Perspectives(ACM, 2018) Mishra, Sonali R.; Miller, Andrew D.; Haldar, Shefali; Khelifi, Maher; Eschler, Jordan; Elera, Rashmi G.; Pollack, Ari H; Pratt, Wanda; Human-Centered Computing, School of Informatics and ComputingThe hospital setting creates a high-stakes environment where patients’ lives depend on accurate tracking of health data. Despite recent work emphasizing the importance of patients’ engagement in their own health care, less is known about how patients track their health and care in the hospital. Through interviews and design probes, we investigated hospitalized patients’ tracking activity and analyzed our results using the stage-based personal informatics model. We used this model to understand how to support the tracking needs of hospitalized patients at each stage. In this paper, we discuss hospitalized patients’ needs for collaboratively tracking their health with their care team. We suggest future extensions of the stage-based model to accommodate collaborative tracking situations, such as hospitals, where data is collected, analyzed, and acted on by multiple people. Our findings uncover new directions for HCI research and highlight ways to support patients in tracking their care and improving patient safety.