- Digital Mental Health Interventions
- Mobile Health and mHealth Applications
- Eating Disorders and Behaviors
- Innovative Human-Technology Interaction
- Schizophrenia research and treatment
- Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills
- Focus Groups and Qualitative Methods
- Counseling, Therapy, and Family Dynamics
- Health Literacy and Information Accessibility
- Mental Health and Psychiatry
- Cognitive and psychological constructs research
- Impact of Technology on Adolescents
IBM (United States)
2018-2021
University of Michigan
2015-2016
The proposed workshop will identify research questions that enable the field to uncover types of work, labor relations, and social impacts should be considered when designing AI-based healthcare technology. aims outline key challenges, guidelines, future agendas for field, provide collaboration opportunities CSCW researchers, scientists, AI clinicians, relevant stakeholders in healthcare, share their perspectives co-create sociotechnical approaches tackle timely issues related automation work.
This study examined the use of time-based objects by patients and their families to manage chronic illnesses at home. Calendar systems medication containers, main types studied, were used as part two family-based collaborative work practices: 1) prompting health management activities, 2) safeguarding these activities. Additionally, artifacts social interaction patterns that managed emotional intimacy: expressing support, hiding disguising illness. Accordingly, home-based illness may be more...
Emotion- and stressed-related eating (ESRE) is associated with weight management difficulties more likely to affect women than men. Additionally, health information technology (HIT) for tends be less effective it men, people who engage in ESRE. Therefore, this study explores how HIT can support overweight/obese curb ESRE behavior. Study participants, all adult (BMI ' 25), logged dietary intake 10 days the Lose It! smartphone app as an elicitation exercise. Cross sectional, semi-structured...
Background Regarding health technologies, African American young adults have low rates of uptake, ongoing usage, and engagement, which may widen sexual inequalities. Objective We aimed to examine uptake factors influencing engagement for a consumer informatics (CHI) intervention HIV/sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention among adults, using the diffusion innovation theory, trust-centered design framework, O’Brien Toms’ model engagement. Methods This community-based participatory...
<sec> <title>BACKGROUND</title> Regarding health technologies, African American young adults have low rates of uptake, ongoing usage, and engagement, which may widen sexual inequalities. </sec> <title>OBJECTIVE</title> We aimed to examine uptake factors influencing engagement for a consumer informatics (CHI) intervention HIV/sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention among adults, using the diffusion innovation theory, trust-centered design framework, O’Brien Toms’ model engagement....