Understanding patient experience: a deployment study in cardiac remote monitoring

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Abstract

The term ‘patient experience’ is currently part of a global discourse on ways to improve healthcare. This study empirically explores what patient experience is in cardiac remote monitoring and considers the implications for user experience (UX). Through interviews around the deployment of a mobile app that enables patients to collaborate with clinicians, we unpack experiences in six themes and present narratives of patients’ lifeworlds. We find that patients’ emotions are grounded in negative feelings (uncertainty, anxiety, loss of hope) and that positive experiences (relief, reassurance, safety) arise from getting feedback on symptoms and from continuous and comforting interaction with clinicians. With this paper, we aim to sensitise UX researchers and designers of patient-centred e-health by proposing three UX dimensions: connectedness, comprehension, and compassion.

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Andersen, T. O., Andersen, P. R. D., Kornum, A. C., & Larsen, T. M. (2017). Understanding patient experience: a deployment study in cardiac remote monitoring. In PervasiveHealth: Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare (pp. 221–230). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3154862.3154868

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