Positive design for children with atopic dermatitis—enhanced problem-solving and possibility-driven approach in the context of chronic disease

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Abstract

Since the 1960s, atopic dermatitis has seen a steady increase in prevalence in developed countries. Most often, the onset begins at an early age and many patients are very young children. Due to their young age, their parents are forced to take over handling of the disease. As a consequence, atopic dermatitis places a high burden not only on affected children, but also on their parents and siblings, limiting human flourishing of a whole family. Therefore, the described research area calls for a possibility-driven approach that looks beyond mere problem-solving while building on existing support possibilities and creating new ones. This paper presents atopi as a result of such a possibility-driven approach. It incorporates existing patient education and severity scoring into an extensive service, adding new elements to turn necessary practices into joyful experiences, to create feelings of relatedness and to increase perceived self-efficacy, thus is suitable to enable human flourishing.

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APA

Weiß, V., Minge, M., Preim, B., & Hußlein, S. (2020). Positive design for children with atopic dermatitis—enhanced problem-solving and possibility-driven approach in the context of chronic disease. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction, 4(4), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti4040069

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