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Uncovering the Emotional Journey for the Ideal Patient ExperienceWhenever we conduct user research in health care, the same pain points consistently emerge. The experience tends to be overwhelming, confusing, frustrating, and stressful. This is because it’s hard to understand, and the process of getting care is often inefficient — health care has usability issues. Ideally, people want to feel in control. They desire health care that is straightforward and easy to understand, and want this care to be delivered through a convenient process. This presentation shared learnings of how patients define the ideal health care experience and focus on a user-driven definition of health care usability. Attendees learned how patients define the ideal health care experience, and to focus on a user-driven definition of health care usability. |
The keynote presentation, ‘A User-Driven Perspective on the Healthcare Experience’, was facilitated by Marty Gage, VP of design research at Lextant. After a brief introduction, we were presented with a discussion of the problem, the solution, and the insights learned. The Healthcare Experience Today Marty starts us off by assessing the current healthcare experience. People find themselves in moments throughout the patient journey. It is not always a fluid experience. All of the research reveals a similar emotional outcome: - Should I seek care?
- What’s my condition?
- What should I expect?
- What are my treatment options
- How should I manage my condition?
- Am I doing it right?
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Touchpoints throughout a users journey includes: people, devices, apps, websites, medication. Touchpoints can be confusing. The current experience is the emotional outcome that results from the interaction between a person and something. Users can be stressed and overwhelmed making it difficult to make decisions, follow procedures and understand complex information. There’s a fundamental usability issue with the healthcare experience. The Desired Healthcare Experience Defining a desired patient experience: The emotional outcome people desire when interacting with something. Image Added
Benefits: Emotions: calm and in control Informed Easy to understand: Sensory cutes: all in one place, minimal steps, guides me and up-to-date, simple language, concise, visual, The Solution Assume you have a usability challenge Treat moments as use cases Think holistically about use cases - Contextual/emotional
- Physical, cognitive, and emotional barriers
- Desired outcomes
Touchpoints are the solutions in the moment Keep key touchpoints discreet and focused with a clear architecture and hierarchy Involve users in determining how the information is delivered Test for usability The Healthcare Usability Challenge We are shown complex information and depending on the situation, stress can limit comprehension. Marty leaves us with this: Embrace easy to understand - Design for the big picture
- Right touchpoints for the right moments
- Involve users in the design
- Use information design best practices
“Even baseline or bad experiences in CPG or retail would be viewed as huge wins in healthcare. There’s so much opportunity to flip the script and impact the entire experience along the way.” Sara Saldoff, OhioHealth If you missed Marty’s presentation, check out the transcript and recording on the CCSQ World Usability Day page. This page also includes an archive of transcripts and recordings of speaker presentations, session materials, and event photos. For more information about the Human-Centered Design Center of Excellence, refer to the HCD CoE Confluence page. Panel |
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