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Co-designing design fictions: a new approach for debating and priming future healthcare technologies and services

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Co-designing design fictions: a new approach for debating and priming future healthcare technologies and services. / Tsekleves, Emmanouil; Darby, Andy; Whicher, Anna et al.
In: Archives of Design Research, Vol. 30, No. 2, 31.05.2017, p. 5-21.

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Tsekleves E, Darby A, Whicher A, Swiatek P. Co-designing design fictions: a new approach for debating and priming future healthcare technologies and services. Archives of Design Research. 2017 May 31;30(2):5-21. doi: 10.15187/adr.2017.05.30.2.5

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@article{acbb0f6f340445c4a19a350c5dc123c3,
title = "Co-designing design fictions: a new approach for debating and priming future healthcare technologies and services",
abstract = "Background Design fictions (DFs) are emerging as a tool aimed at engaging people in debating and questioning the direction of future technologies, services and possible societies. Following the challenges placed on healthcare provision by an ageing population, governments are introducing policies related to ageing that will shape future healthcare services. The exploratory ProtoPolicy project, investigated how co-created DFs might be used to help older citizens imagine the future implications of policy initiatives through the lens of technology in an ageing society.Methods A co-design research approach was employed. In collaboration with older citizens (n=21, 65-94 years old) the project team co-created two DFs based on citizen responses to government policy, which explored the issues of assisted living/smart-homes and assisted dying/ euthanasia in the UK. Feedback on the DFs was sought from citizens at a co-design workshop.Results Five themes emerged from the thematic analysis of the workshop engagements with citizens: increasing the plausibility and acceptance of future healthcare technologies and services, raising ethical concerns and questions, conceptualising new healthcare producs and services, helping with understanding and decision-making, and service/technology requirements capture.Conclusions Understanding and engaging with more complex social healthcare technologies through a co-design design fiction approach might provide added value for citizens in priming new technology introduction in healthcare services. Co-designing design fictions can also provide researchers with more in-depth insights about the preferable futures articulated by different groups within the context of technology and healthcare services.",
keywords = "Design for Healthcare, Design Fiction, Speculative Design, Health Services Research, Healthcare Technology",
author = "Emmanouil Tsekleves and Andy Darby and Anna Whicher and Piotr Swiatek",
year = "2017",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.15187/adr.2017.05.30.2.5",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "5--21",
journal = "Archives of Design Research",
issn = "2288-2987",
publisher = "Korean Society of Design Science",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Co-designing design fictions

T2 - a new approach for debating and priming future healthcare technologies and services

AU - Tsekleves, Emmanouil

AU - Darby, Andy

AU - Whicher, Anna

AU - Swiatek, Piotr

PY - 2017/5/31

Y1 - 2017/5/31

N2 - Background Design fictions (DFs) are emerging as a tool aimed at engaging people in debating and questioning the direction of future technologies, services and possible societies. Following the challenges placed on healthcare provision by an ageing population, governments are introducing policies related to ageing that will shape future healthcare services. The exploratory ProtoPolicy project, investigated how co-created DFs might be used to help older citizens imagine the future implications of policy initiatives through the lens of technology in an ageing society.Methods A co-design research approach was employed. In collaboration with older citizens (n=21, 65-94 years old) the project team co-created two DFs based on citizen responses to government policy, which explored the issues of assisted living/smart-homes and assisted dying/ euthanasia in the UK. Feedback on the DFs was sought from citizens at a co-design workshop.Results Five themes emerged from the thematic analysis of the workshop engagements with citizens: increasing the plausibility and acceptance of future healthcare technologies and services, raising ethical concerns and questions, conceptualising new healthcare producs and services, helping with understanding and decision-making, and service/technology requirements capture.Conclusions Understanding and engaging with more complex social healthcare technologies through a co-design design fiction approach might provide added value for citizens in priming new technology introduction in healthcare services. Co-designing design fictions can also provide researchers with more in-depth insights about the preferable futures articulated by different groups within the context of technology and healthcare services.

AB - Background Design fictions (DFs) are emerging as a tool aimed at engaging people in debating and questioning the direction of future technologies, services and possible societies. Following the challenges placed on healthcare provision by an ageing population, governments are introducing policies related to ageing that will shape future healthcare services. The exploratory ProtoPolicy project, investigated how co-created DFs might be used to help older citizens imagine the future implications of policy initiatives through the lens of technology in an ageing society.Methods A co-design research approach was employed. In collaboration with older citizens (n=21, 65-94 years old) the project team co-created two DFs based on citizen responses to government policy, which explored the issues of assisted living/smart-homes and assisted dying/ euthanasia in the UK. Feedback on the DFs was sought from citizens at a co-design workshop.Results Five themes emerged from the thematic analysis of the workshop engagements with citizens: increasing the plausibility and acceptance of future healthcare technologies and services, raising ethical concerns and questions, conceptualising new healthcare producs and services, helping with understanding and decision-making, and service/technology requirements capture.Conclusions Understanding and engaging with more complex social healthcare technologies through a co-design design fiction approach might provide added value for citizens in priming new technology introduction in healthcare services. Co-designing design fictions can also provide researchers with more in-depth insights about the preferable futures articulated by different groups within the context of technology and healthcare services.

KW - Design for Healthcare

KW - Design Fiction

KW - Speculative Design

KW - Health Services Research

KW - Healthcare Technology

U2 - 10.15187/adr.2017.05.30.2.5

DO - 10.15187/adr.2017.05.30.2.5

M3 - Journal article

VL - 30

SP - 5

EP - 21

JO - Archives of Design Research

JF - Archives of Design Research

SN - 2288-2987

IS - 2

ER -