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Autori principali: de Paula, Danielly, Juehling, Daniel, Uebernickel, Falk
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2024
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.17843
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author de Paula, Danielly
Juehling, Daniel
Uebernickel, Falk
author_facet de Paula, Danielly
Juehling, Daniel
Uebernickel, Falk
contents Stigma, a recognized global barrier to effective disease management, impacts social interactions, resource access, and psychological well-being. In this study, we developed a patient-centered framework for deriving design requirements and interventions for health conditions subject to social stigma. This study introduces a patient-centered framework, grounded in sociotechnical systems theory, to create tailored interventions and design requirements for health conditions influenced by social stigma. We tested this framework through a mixed-method study on chronic pelvic pain patients. Our approach led to the identification of ten design requirements that encompass behavioral and psychological support and strategies for day-to-day living. The findings reveal a preference among CPP patients for priming and social support interventions. This study underscores the value of a systems-based perspective in healthcare, advocating for a nuanced, patient-centered approach that addresses the complex nature of health conditions affected by social stigma. It contributes to the ongoing discourse on integrating STS theory into healthcare frameworks, highlighting the need for targeted strategies to combat the complexities of stigma in patient care.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2403_17843
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Sociotechnical Framework For Addressing Stigma and Designing Personalized Digital Health Products
de Paula, Danielly
Juehling, Daniel
Uebernickel, Falk
Human-Computer Interaction
Stigma, a recognized global barrier to effective disease management, impacts social interactions, resource access, and psychological well-being. In this study, we developed a patient-centered framework for deriving design requirements and interventions for health conditions subject to social stigma. This study introduces a patient-centered framework, grounded in sociotechnical systems theory, to create tailored interventions and design requirements for health conditions influenced by social stigma. We tested this framework through a mixed-method study on chronic pelvic pain patients. Our approach led to the identification of ten design requirements that encompass behavioral and psychological support and strategies for day-to-day living. The findings reveal a preference among CPP patients for priming and social support interventions. This study underscores the value of a systems-based perspective in healthcare, advocating for a nuanced, patient-centered approach that addresses the complex nature of health conditions affected by social stigma. It contributes to the ongoing discourse on integrating STS theory into healthcare frameworks, highlighting the need for targeted strategies to combat the complexities of stigma in patient care.
title A Sociotechnical Framework For Addressing Stigma and Designing Personalized Digital Health Products
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.17843