4.1 Article

Primary Care Women's Health Screening: A Case Study of a Community Engaged Human Centered Design Approach to Enhancing the Screening Process

期刊

MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL
卷 23, 期 11, 页码 1446-1458

出版社

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10995-019-02802-8

关键词

Health screenings; Women; Intimate partner violence; Human center design

资金

  1. North Carolina Coalition against Domestic Violence

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Purpose To apply a Human Centered Design (HCD) approach to co-designing a comprehensive women's health screening tool with community partners. Description Evidenced-based health screenings for behaviors and risks are important tools in primary health care and disease prevention, especially for women. However, numerous barriers limit the effective implementation of comprehensive health screenings, and often lead to excluding important risks such as intimate partner violence (IPV). Utilizing a human centered design approach (HCD), Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC, NC USA) developed a community co-designed 9-topic health screening for women. Key end-users were recruited to participate in the design process, including women who identified IPV as a health issue in their community, Spanish speaking women, domestic violence program organizers, and MAHEC staff. Assessment A total of 21 participants collaborated during three design sessions on two specific goals: 1) creating a comprehensive women's health screening tool from the existing tools that were in use in our clinics at the time, and 2) incorporating IPV screening. Through the HCD sessions, participants highlighted the impact of what they termed Triple T: time, trust and talk on the effectiveness of women's health screening. Conclusion Our co-designed women's health screening tool is a first step towards addressing screening barriers from both primary care provider's and community women's perspectives. Future research will explore the facilitators of and barriers to implementing the tools in different primary care settings. Future work should also more systematically examine whether and how screening processes may reinforce or contribute to women's feelings of being stereotyped, and how screening processes can be designed to avoid stereotype threat, which has the potential to reduce the effectiveness of screenings intended to promote women's health.

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