Edinburgh Research Archive

Value cocreation in health

dc.contributor.advisor
Anderson, Stuart
dc.contributor.advisor
Williams, Robin
dc.contributor.author
Nnabuko, Uchenna Chioma
dc.contributor.sponsor
other
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dc.date.accessioned
2021-11-05T11:54:11Z
dc.date.available
2021-11-05T11:54:11Z
dc.date.issued
2021-07-31
dc.description.abstract
A shift in the focus of healthcare from diseases and treatment to wellness and prevention has contributed to the widespread acceptance and commitment to adopt preventive healthcare practices – including preventive health applications (apps) and devices. The aim of these apps and devices is to equip the user with information about their health to enable them to make better lifestyle choices that will positively impact their health in the long run. However, the use of these preventive health apps and devices is pervaded by a high user dropout rate. This draws attention to the way these technologies are designed. Recently, design frameworks for technology taking account of the values of users have arisen. These surface value explicitly and enable the use of value to incentivise action on the part of users towards prevention. Improvements in the effectiveness and efficiency of such frameworks offer new opportunities to use value to achieve behavioural change. As healthcare delivery and management becomes increasingly digital and used by highly diverse populations, understanding the role of value as an incentive gains importance. Many attempts at digitalisation of healthcare systems (particularly when we try to do things at scale) have failed and one potential reason for this is the different (and often competing) value systems of the stakeholders and different notions of value they use to judge and motivate use of the system. This thesis addresses value and value systems as a key factor in the development of healthcare systems and investigates how such an approach could be taken. Taking Value Sensitive Design (VSD) as a starting point, we analyse the role of stakeholder value. Motivated by our empirical experience we extend VSD to take account of the emergence of value through interaction. The main contributions of this thesis are: (a) The empirical analysis of a large-scale pilot on the adoption of wearable health technology and (b) motivated by this empirical analysis, the development of the Value Cocreation Design (VCD) framework (an extension of the VSD framework). VCD is a novel model that shifts the design focus from creating value to cocreating value. VCD focuses on the services that actors exchange in order to identify value in contrast with VSD that uses a predefined framework of values that the designer expects users to hold. The VCD framework is validated using empirical evidence obtained from the Berkshire Wearable Technology Pilot study. We also evaluate VCD by applying it to the Berkshire Wearable Technology Pilot. This exemplifies its application in a real-life design scenario
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38213
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/1479
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Nnabuko, U. and Anderson, S. (2018). The Effect of ICT on Social Support in Health care: A Systematic Review. IADIS-International Journal on Computer Science and Information Systems, 13(1):14–32
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dc.relation.hasversion
Nnabuko, U. C. (2015). Motivation of PHR Users Using Social Interaction and Team-Oriented Models. Master of Science diss., Univ
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dc.subject
value
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dc.subject
wearable devices
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dc.subject
value cocreation design
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dc.subject
health
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dc.title
Value cocreation in health
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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