Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Aging
Date Submitted: Jan 8, 2021
Date Accepted: May 16, 2021
Date Submitted to PubMed: Aug 12, 2021
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
Smart Home Sensing and Monitoring in Households with Dementia: User-Centered Design Approach
ABSTRACT
Background:
As life expectancy grows, so do the challenges of caring for an ageing population. Older adults, including people with dementia, want to live independently and feel in control of their lives for as long as possible. Assistive technologies powered by Artificial Intelligence and Internet of Things devices are being proposed to provide living environments that support the users’ safety, psychological, and medical needs through remote monitoring and interventions.
Objective:
This study investigates the functional, psychosocial, and environmental needs of people living with dementia, their caregivers, clinicians, and health and social care service providers towards the design and implementation of smart home systems.
Methods:
We used an iterative user-centered design approach comprising nine sub-studies. First, semi-structured interviews (N = 9 people with dementia, 9 caregivers, 10 academic and clinical staff), ethnographic observations in clinics (N = 10 people with dementia, 10 caregivers, 3 clinical monitoring team members), and workshops (N = 35 pairs of people with dementia and caregivers, 12 health and social care clinicians) were conducted to define the needs of people with dementia, home caregivers and professional stakeholders in both daily activities and technology-specific interactions. Then, the spectrum of needs identified was represented via patient-caregiver personas and discussed with stakeholders in a workshop (N = 14 occupational therapists, 4 National Health Service pathway directors, 6 researchers in occupational therapy, neuropsychiatry and engineering) and two focus groups with managers of healthcare services (N = 8), eliciting opportunities for innovative care technologies and public health strategies. Finally, these opportunities were discussed in semi-structured interviews with participants of a smart home trial involving environmental sensors, physiological measurement devices, smart watches, and tablet-based chatbots and cognitive assessment puzzles (N = 10 caregivers, 2 people with dementia). A thematic analysis revealed factors that motivate household members to use these technologies.
Results:
Outcomes of these activities include the definition of clinically relevant patient-caregiver personas, a qualitative and quantitative analysis of patient, caregiver and clinician needs, and the identification of challenges and opportunities for the design and implementation of remote monitoring systems in public health pathways.
Conclusions:
Participatory design methods increased the impact of public-patient-involvement by supporting the triangulation of perspectives, the development of more patient-centered interventions, and their translation to clinical practice and public health strategy. We discuss the implications and limitations of these dementia-specific findings, the value and the applicability of our methodology, and directions for future research.
Citation