Innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low-income primary care settings: A human-centered design approach.

This article presents the design process of innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in primary care centers located in low-income settings in Cali, Colombia, using the Human-Centered Design (HCD). The project was developed in collaboration with a public healthcare network comprised of 3...

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Main Authors: Marcela Arrivillaga, Paula C Bermúdez, Juan Pablo García-Cifuentes, Jorge Botero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238099
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author Marcela Arrivillaga
Paula C Bermúdez
Juan Pablo García-Cifuentes
Jorge Botero
author_facet Marcela Arrivillaga
Paula C Bermúdez
Juan Pablo García-Cifuentes
Jorge Botero
author_sort Marcela Arrivillaga
collection DOAJ
description This article presents the design process of innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in primary care centers located in low-income settings in Cali, Colombia, using the Human-Centered Design (HCD). The project was developed in collaboration with a public healthcare network comprised of 38 urban and rural centers with women between the ages of 25 and 65 years, healthcare providers of the cancer program, healthcare administrators and the general manager of said network. Our HCD process involved five stages: research, need synthesis, ideation and co-design process, prototyping and in-context usability testing. In practice, some of the stages are overlapped and iterated throughout the design process. We conducted observations, open-ended interviews and conversations, multi-stakeholder workshops, focus groups, systematic text condensation analyses and tests in real contexts. As a result, we designed four prototypes: (1) 'Encanto': An educational manicure service, (2) 'No le des la espalda a la citología': A media-based strategy, (3) An educational wireless queuing device in the waiting room, and (4) Citobot: A cervical cancer early detection device, system, and method. The tests carried out with each prototype showed their value, limitations and possibilities in terms of subsequent development and validation through public health research or clinical research. We recognize that a longer-term evaluation is required in order to determine whether the prototypes will be used regularly, integrated into cervical cancer screening services and effectively improve access to cytology as a screening test. We conclude that HCD is a useful for design-based prevention in the field of cervical cancer. The integration of this approach with public health research would allow the generation of evidence during to the formulation of policies and programs as well as optimize existing interventions and, ultimately, facilitate the scalability and financing of what actually works.
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spelling doaj.art-7f2857c66bc64864bd356aeaa30893782022-12-21T22:36:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023809910.1371/journal.pone.0238099Innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low-income primary care settings: A human-centered design approach.Marcela ArrivillagaPaula C BermúdezJuan Pablo García-CifuentesJorge BoteroThis article presents the design process of innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in primary care centers located in low-income settings in Cali, Colombia, using the Human-Centered Design (HCD). The project was developed in collaboration with a public healthcare network comprised of 38 urban and rural centers with women between the ages of 25 and 65 years, healthcare providers of the cancer program, healthcare administrators and the general manager of said network. Our HCD process involved five stages: research, need synthesis, ideation and co-design process, prototyping and in-context usability testing. In practice, some of the stages are overlapped and iterated throughout the design process. We conducted observations, open-ended interviews and conversations, multi-stakeholder workshops, focus groups, systematic text condensation analyses and tests in real contexts. As a result, we designed four prototypes: (1) 'Encanto': An educational manicure service, (2) 'No le des la espalda a la citología': A media-based strategy, (3) An educational wireless queuing device in the waiting room, and (4) Citobot: A cervical cancer early detection device, system, and method. The tests carried out with each prototype showed their value, limitations and possibilities in terms of subsequent development and validation through public health research or clinical research. We recognize that a longer-term evaluation is required in order to determine whether the prototypes will be used regularly, integrated into cervical cancer screening services and effectively improve access to cytology as a screening test. We conclude that HCD is a useful for design-based prevention in the field of cervical cancer. The integration of this approach with public health research would allow the generation of evidence during to the formulation of policies and programs as well as optimize existing interventions and, ultimately, facilitate the scalability and financing of what actually works.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238099
spellingShingle Marcela Arrivillaga
Paula C Bermúdez
Juan Pablo García-Cifuentes
Jorge Botero
Innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low-income primary care settings: A human-centered design approach.
PLoS ONE
title Innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low-income primary care settings: A human-centered design approach.
title_full Innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low-income primary care settings: A human-centered design approach.
title_fullStr Innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low-income primary care settings: A human-centered design approach.
title_full_unstemmed Innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low-income primary care settings: A human-centered design approach.
title_short Innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low-income primary care settings: A human-centered design approach.
title_sort innovative prototypes for cervical cancer prevention in low income primary care settings a human centered design approach
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238099
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