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Hauptverfasser: Song, Hyungwoo, Kim, Jeongha, Kim, Minju, Kwak, Duhyung, Shin, Minjeong, suh, Bongwon, Jung, Hyunggu
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2026
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12632
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author Song, Hyungwoo
Kim, Jeongha
Kim, Minju
Kwak, Duhyung
Shin, Minjeong
suh, Bongwon
Jung, Hyunggu
author_facet Song, Hyungwoo
Kim, Jeongha
Kim, Minju
Kwak, Duhyung
Shin, Minjeong
suh, Bongwon
Jung, Hyunggu
contents While it is known that North Korean defectors (NKDs) struggle with South Korea's healthcare system, the specific challenges of their patient journey remain underexplored. To investigate this, we conducted interviews with 10 NKDs about an 8-step patient journey and identified the clinical consultation step as a critical barrier for all participants, marked by three key challenges: expressing symptoms, managing social and cultural concerns, and overcoming language differences. In response, we developed Medibridge, a mobile prototype that allows users to rehearse with an AI doctor before a real hospital visit to generate a tangible ``Helper Note'' for their actual consultation. Our evaluation with 15 NKDs showed improvements in perceived communication capability, including greater expression clarity, reduced social and cultural concerns, and enhanced linguistic confidence. Our contributions include an empirical understanding of NKDs' healthcare challenges, a novel AI-powered rehearsal system that prepares users for real-world clinical communication, and design implications for inclusive technologies for displaced populations.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_12632
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle "I Should Know, But I Dare Not Ask": From Understanding Challenges in Patient Journeys to Deriving Design Implications for North Korean Defectors' Adaptation
Song, Hyungwoo
Kim, Jeongha
Kim, Minju
Kwak, Duhyung
Shin, Minjeong
suh, Bongwon
Jung, Hyunggu
Human-Computer Interaction
While it is known that North Korean defectors (NKDs) struggle with South Korea's healthcare system, the specific challenges of their patient journey remain underexplored. To investigate this, we conducted interviews with 10 NKDs about an 8-step patient journey and identified the clinical consultation step as a critical barrier for all participants, marked by three key challenges: expressing symptoms, managing social and cultural concerns, and overcoming language differences. In response, we developed Medibridge, a mobile prototype that allows users to rehearse with an AI doctor before a real hospital visit to generate a tangible ``Helper Note'' for their actual consultation. Our evaluation with 15 NKDs showed improvements in perceived communication capability, including greater expression clarity, reduced social and cultural concerns, and enhanced linguistic confidence. Our contributions include an empirical understanding of NKDs' healthcare challenges, a novel AI-powered rehearsal system that prepares users for real-world clinical communication, and design implications for inclusive technologies for displaced populations.
title "I Should Know, But I Dare Not Ask": From Understanding Challenges in Patient Journeys to Deriving Design Implications for North Korean Defectors' Adaptation
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.12632