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Digital legacy and palliative care: Using technology, design and healthcare partnerships to research how digital information is managed after death

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Posterpeer-review

Published

Standard

Digital legacy and palliative care: Using technology, design and healthcare partnerships to research how digital information is managed after death. / Nwosu, Amara; Stanley, Sarah; Norris, James et al.
2023. Poster session presented at Hospice Uk National Conference 2023, Liverpool, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Posterpeer-review

Harvard

Nwosu, A, Stanley, S, Norris, J & Taubert, M 2023, 'Digital legacy and palliative care: Using technology, design and healthcare partnerships to research how digital information is managed after death', Hospice Uk National Conference 2023, Liverpool, United Kingdom, 6/11/23 - 8/11/23.

APA

Nwosu, A., Stanley, S., Norris, J., & Taubert, M. (2023). Digital legacy and palliative care: Using technology, design and healthcare partnerships to research how digital information is managed after death. Poster session presented at Hospice Uk National Conference 2023, Liverpool, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Nwosu A, Stanley S, Norris J, Taubert M. Digital legacy and palliative care: Using technology, design and healthcare partnerships to research how digital information is managed after death. 2023. Poster session presented at Hospice Uk National Conference 2023, Liverpool, United Kingdom.

Author

Nwosu, Amara ; Stanley, Sarah ; Norris, James et al. / Digital legacy and palliative care: Using technology, design and healthcare partnerships to research how digital information is managed after death. Poster session presented at Hospice Uk National Conference 2023, Liverpool, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{f8eb546230474636889c06fe2f3605d0,
title = "Digital legacy and palliative care: Using technology, design and healthcare partnerships to research how digital information is managed after death",
abstract = "Background Research, using design and digital methods, can potentially help patients and caregivers to manage their digital legacy (the digital information available about someone following their death1). However, there is a lack of multi-disciplinary partnerships needed to conduct digital legacy research in palliative care. Multidisciplinary partnerships involving design, digital and palliative care stakeholders can potentially improve the conduct of digital legacy research to improve outcomes for patients, caregivers and wider society. Aim To develop a multidisciplinary digital legacy design network (compromising of palliative care, digital and design stakeholders) to work collaboratively to improve the capacity to conduct digital legacy research. Methods This study is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), North West Coast Clinical Research Network. Over 12 months, we will conduct of number of engagement activities to facilitate connection with stakeholders (e.g., palliative care, digital and design stakeholders). Planned activities include two face-to-face conferences and regular online meetings. Stakeholders will work collaboratively across the following work-packages: (1) role of new technologies in digital legacy, (2) role of design in digital legacy, and (3) inequalities and inequity in digital legacy. Results/anticipated outputs NIHR Funding has been secured and planning is in progress. Anticipated outputs include: (1) closer collaborative working of multidisciplinary stakeholders, leading to innovation, co-creation and generation of mutually beneficial outcomes for patients, staff and services, and (2) development of research funded studies, originating from the work-packages, to provide evidence for how patients, caregivers and wider society can be supported to manage their digital legacy. Conclusion Our vision is that this activity will develop a model that can be translated to other settings, which will demonstrate how multidisciplinary stakeholders can work collaboratively, to improve delivery of digital legacy palliative care research. ",
author = "Amara Nwosu and Sarah Stanley and James Norris and Mark Taubert",
year = "2023",
month = nov,
day = "6",
language = "English",
note = "Hospice Uk National Conference 2023 ; Conference date: 06-11-2023 Through 08-11-2023",
url = "https://www.hospiceuk.org/innovation-hub/courses-conferences/national-conference",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Digital legacy and palliative care: Using technology, design and healthcare partnerships to research how digital information is managed after death

AU - Nwosu, Amara

AU - Stanley, Sarah

AU - Norris, James

AU - Taubert, Mark

PY - 2023/11/6

Y1 - 2023/11/6

N2 - Background Research, using design and digital methods, can potentially help patients and caregivers to manage their digital legacy (the digital information available about someone following their death1). However, there is a lack of multi-disciplinary partnerships needed to conduct digital legacy research in palliative care. Multidisciplinary partnerships involving design, digital and palliative care stakeholders can potentially improve the conduct of digital legacy research to improve outcomes for patients, caregivers and wider society. Aim To develop a multidisciplinary digital legacy design network (compromising of palliative care, digital and design stakeholders) to work collaboratively to improve the capacity to conduct digital legacy research. Methods This study is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), North West Coast Clinical Research Network. Over 12 months, we will conduct of number of engagement activities to facilitate connection with stakeholders (e.g., palliative care, digital and design stakeholders). Planned activities include two face-to-face conferences and regular online meetings. Stakeholders will work collaboratively across the following work-packages: (1) role of new technologies in digital legacy, (2) role of design in digital legacy, and (3) inequalities and inequity in digital legacy. Results/anticipated outputs NIHR Funding has been secured and planning is in progress. Anticipated outputs include: (1) closer collaborative working of multidisciplinary stakeholders, leading to innovation, co-creation and generation of mutually beneficial outcomes for patients, staff and services, and (2) development of research funded studies, originating from the work-packages, to provide evidence for how patients, caregivers and wider society can be supported to manage their digital legacy. Conclusion Our vision is that this activity will develop a model that can be translated to other settings, which will demonstrate how multidisciplinary stakeholders can work collaboratively, to improve delivery of digital legacy palliative care research.

AB - Background Research, using design and digital methods, can potentially help patients and caregivers to manage their digital legacy (the digital information available about someone following their death1). However, there is a lack of multi-disciplinary partnerships needed to conduct digital legacy research in palliative care. Multidisciplinary partnerships involving design, digital and palliative care stakeholders can potentially improve the conduct of digital legacy research to improve outcomes for patients, caregivers and wider society. Aim To develop a multidisciplinary digital legacy design network (compromising of palliative care, digital and design stakeholders) to work collaboratively to improve the capacity to conduct digital legacy research. Methods This study is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), North West Coast Clinical Research Network. Over 12 months, we will conduct of number of engagement activities to facilitate connection with stakeholders (e.g., palliative care, digital and design stakeholders). Planned activities include two face-to-face conferences and regular online meetings. Stakeholders will work collaboratively across the following work-packages: (1) role of new technologies in digital legacy, (2) role of design in digital legacy, and (3) inequalities and inequity in digital legacy. Results/anticipated outputs NIHR Funding has been secured and planning is in progress. Anticipated outputs include: (1) closer collaborative working of multidisciplinary stakeholders, leading to innovation, co-creation and generation of mutually beneficial outcomes for patients, staff and services, and (2) development of research funded studies, originating from the work-packages, to provide evidence for how patients, caregivers and wider society can be supported to manage their digital legacy. Conclusion Our vision is that this activity will develop a model that can be translated to other settings, which will demonstrate how multidisciplinary stakeholders can work collaboratively, to improve delivery of digital legacy palliative care research.

M3 - Poster

T2 - Hospice Uk National Conference 2023

Y2 - 6 November 2023 through 8 November 2023

ER -