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Talking to Guinea Pigs: engaging the users in the development of new health technology. Norma Morris, Jem Hebden & Brian Balmer, University College London. Aims and methods. involve research subjects in steering the development of a new technology
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Talking to Guinea Pigs: engaging the users in the development of new health technology Norma Morris, Jem Hebden & Brian Balmer, University College London
Aims and methods • involve research subjects in steering the development of a new technology • assess kind of contribution they can make and researchers’ use of this input • Methods include monitoring scan sessions, interviewing volunteers, and systematic feedback to research team
Project set-up • Collaboration with a Medical Physics team who are developing optical imaging for diagnosis of breast cancer • programme requires tests on human subjects: first, healthy volunteers, then volunteer patients with known lesions • we supplement technical data acquisition with data on subjects’ experience
The patient interface Optical Mammography
Summary of results to date • practical suggestions for improvement of the man-machine interface • patient/volunteer criteria for acceptance of new instrumentation and process • social factors eg researcher-subject relationship) important for the anxieties and satisfaction of patient/volunteer
Coda: what volunteers told us • About ‘feeling comfortable’ - anxieties are directed more at social than physical aspects of the test situtation • About privacy/embarrassment – avoiding the stress of ‘exposing yourself’ is an important criterion of acceptability • About ‘performance ‘- volunteers need to feel they have performed well – another social anxiety • See the quotes that follow
‘Feeling comfortable’ • I liked – feeling comfortable – you know, with the people. I think that would be important for a lot of people. [V2)] • There wasn’t anything that I didn’t feel comfortable with. ...... I was mentally comfortable. [P4] • she was really so friendly: she made me feel really comfortable [P8]
Invasiveness - privacy/embarrassment • it was basically just being anxious about exposing yourself. Because I didn’t feel anxious about the test. [P2] • it didn’t bother me standing there with, you know, people looking at my breasts .. but someone else may find that a little bit – strange [V2] • it’s quite private ... quite concealed. I didn’t feel self-conscious [P1]
Performance • Is everything all right? ....I’m paranoid in case I mess up on it [P2] • I think .... the doctor [should be] more talking to you; to reassure you, that you are OK, or in a good position, or you are doing something or not [P5] • I feel such a failure [P11]
Conclusions • Not guinea-pigs, but collaborators • Volunteers can contribute to the research- practical advice from experience- criteria for patient acceptablility- continuing cooperation and improvement in research quality if the relationship is right