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1.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 306: 359-363, 2023 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37638936

ABSTRACT

The promise of digital health interventions is tempered by the realities of digital capabilities and infrastructure, especially for older persons. This paper critically examines learnings from a rapid evidence review of digital information tools along with a study evaluating the uptake of a digitally-based healthy ageing intervention by 53 older Australians. Findings suggest that digital literacy is an important precursor to engagement with digital information tools, and that digital information tools must be designed with digital literacy in mind. To achieve digital health equity and realise the potential outcomes that digital tools offer, it may well be necessary to support consumers with the basics of mastering digital platforms.


Subject(s)
Health Equity , Healthy Aging , Aged , Humans , Australia , Learning , Literacy
2.
Disabil Rehabil Assist Technol ; 18(5): 603-609, 2023 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33977806

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Inclusion is a core philosophy for health practitioners and human service users, and co-production is a way to achieve inclusion. Australia's assistive technology (AT) community seeks to include and amplify the voices of service and product users at multiple levels. Implementation of genuine partnerships for inclusion is however challenging. This paper describes the iterative co-design process undertaken to structure and deliver a peer-led information and support program, enabling AT users and supporters to build their AT decision making capability and share their expertise with each other and the broader community. METHODS: A living labs approach was grounded in co-design principles and drew on the peer education, AT competency and capability-building knowledge base. Methods included embedding intersectional capabilities within the service, and the engagement of over 600 people in design thinking and program iterations through surveys, focus groups, journey mapping and think tanks. RESULTS: A national, peer-led, co-designed online community for AT users was established and has been running since 2017. The community of 5000 users contribute to a peer-led information and support initiative geared to share expertise and build AT decision making capability. CONCLUSIONS: Service delivery by the AT user community and for the AT user community requires a commitment to co-design, and an engagement with concepts of risk, competency, scope of practice and capability. The learnings from AT Chat have implications for AT services on this journey everywhere.Implications for rehabilitationActive co-design of AT services meets human rights and good practice benchmarks required by contemporary services.Foregrounding AT users within program design and delivery, brings a range of positive outcomes and possibilities for the way services are delivered.AT users have substantial untapped potential which brings tangible outcomes for other AT users, health professionals, service provider organizations and for society.Development of paid roles and pathways to recognize the skills of AT users, and indeed AT communities has potential to improve AT user self-efficacy as well as to contribute to the AT workforce.


Subject(s)
Self-Help Devices , Humans , Focus Groups , Learning
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