How Designers Are Transforming Healthcare
This is an open access book. How Designers are Transforming Healthcare is a bold manifesto for change, demonstrating the value of a strategic design-led approach. Drawing on a rich array of real-world projects, this book illustrates how designers, in collaboration with clinicians and consumers, are...
Other Authors: | , , |
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Format: | eBook |
Language: | Inglés |
Published: |
Singapore :
Springer Nature Singapore
2024.
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Edition: | 1st ed. 2024. |
Subjects: | |
See on Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009845836506719 |
Table of Contents:
- 1 Changemakers: Designers and Healthcare
- Part I Participatory Human Centred Co-Design
- 2 Virtual Multi-Clinician Care for Diabetes: the Virtual Outpatient Integration for Chronic Disease (VOICeD) telehealth project
- 3 Cancer Wellness: Co-creating a new virtual service delivery model
- 4 Equitable Access to Stroke Care: Visualising systems of care for stroke patients
- Part II Design Thinking
- 5 It takes a village': Co-designing family-centred care in a paediatric intensive care unit
- 6 NICU mum to PICU researcher: A reflection on place, people and the power of shared experience.
- 7 Bringing the university to the hospital: QUT Design Internships at the Queensland Childrens’ Hospital Paediatric Intensive Care Unit
- 8 Designing out-procedural pain: the value of a rapid onehour co-design sprint
- 9 Co-designing Design Thinking Workshops 10 Introducing Design Thinking for Senior Health Professionals
- Part III Prototyping
- 11 More than a cute thing to do
- Part IV Design Doing
- 12 Parroting playful places: Designing wayfinding for the Queensland Children’s Hospital
- 13 “Whose heartbeat is that?”: An animation approach to promoting cultural safety in healthcare
- 14 Co-designing access to just healthcare for all consumers
- 15 Graphics and Icons for healthcare with a focus on cultural appropriateness, diversity and inclusion
- 16 Agency and Access: Redesigning the prison health request process
- Part V Design Visioning 17 Co-designing the future: Technology-enabled care in regional communities
- 18 Connecting rehabilitation teams: A design-led, arts-based and appreciative inquiry inspired approach to organizational change in healthcare
- 19 Emergency Room Exits and Entrances
- 20 Design as a catalyst for ‘systemic designability’: Reflecting on the origins of HEAL and its vital role in transforming healthcare in Queensland.