An mHealth application for chronic vascular access: Consumer led co-creation.

Amanda J Ullman,Victoria Gibson,Tricia M Kleidon,Sebastian Binnewies, Ryoma Ohira,Nicole Marsh,Craig McBride, Karen Winterbourn, Francesca Boyte, Jacqueline Cunninghame, Natasha Roberts, Grace Hui Xu,Mari Takashima,Marie Cooke,Claire M Rickard,Joshua Byrnes,Emily Larsen

Journal of pediatric nursing(2024)

引用 0|浏览16
暂无评分
摘要
PURPOSE:Children with chronic and complex health conditions frequently need intravenous devices. The current approach to intravenous device selection, insertion, and monitoring is inconsistent, and healthcare consumers are often negatively affected by siloed health information, and poor future planning. Despite child- and family-centred care being recognised as a pillar of paediatric nursing care, limited implementation for vascular access device planning and management is evident. DESIGN AND METHODS:To address this, we conducted a multi-phased approach to co-create, then evaluate, a mobile health (mHealth) application: IV Passport. Co-creation involved a prioritisation survey, followed by a Passport advisory panel consensus meeting. Following confirmation of the required content and features of the Passport, the mHealth application was designed and content validation achieved via survey. RESULTS:The prioritisation survey yielded recommendations for seven features (e.g., graphical presentations of current/past devices). Content for nine device types (e.g., totally implanted ports) was suggested, each with 10 related items (e.g., insertion site). Content items for device-associated complications, future vascular access plans, and educational resources were also suggested. Following design, the application was released through Apple and Android platforms; and adapted to a paper version. Content validation was established; 100% strongly agreed the application was easy to use; 80% agreed/strongly agreed that they would recommend the Passport to others. CONCLUSION:IV Passport embodies effective child- and family-centred care through consumer co-creation to empower patients and families manage vascular access devices. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS:IV Passport remains active; and can be utilised across many healthcare settings and patient populations.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要