1 Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Design4Health Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1st - 3rd July 2020 Editors: Kirsty Christer, Claire Craig and Paul Chamberlain ISBN: 978-1-8381117-0-0 © 2020 Lab4Living, Sheffield Hallam University Volume 1 2 Table of Contents: Volume 1 Foreword 5 Reflections from Sabine Wildevuur – host of Design4Health 2020 6 Academic Programme and Review Committee 7 Themes of the conference 8 Citations for the Proceedings 9 Collaborating in Complexity: Strategies for interdisciplinary collaboration in design research 10 Daan Andriessen1, Berit Godfroij2, Kees Greven1, Marieke Zielhuis1 Meta-themes – Designing for an active lifestyle: Facilitating interdisciplinary collaboration 18 Dennis Arts,1,2 Len Kromkamp1 and Steven Vos1,2 Co-design Strategies for Merging Evidence-based and Experience-based Input in a Healthcare Context 28 Judith Austin1, Jelle van Dijk2, Constance Drossaert1 Omnivisi Earable: Continuous and non-invasive monitoring of vital signs 29 Mücahit Aydin1, Armaĝan Albayrak1 , Kaspar Jansen1, Jaco Hoekman2 and Rene Klaassen2 Co-design for Social Care Service Systems: Aligning better to Older Immigrant Communities 38 Nevena Balezdrova, Youngok Choi, Busayawan Lam Collaborative practices through design and social services: The phases of a cognitive stimulation pilot project. 39 João Bernarda1,2 and Ana Margarida Ferreira1,2 Service roadmapping: mapping the digital service potential of smart care concepts for multi-users service designs 52 Lotte Bernards, Lianne Simonse, Armagan Albayrak Making makes me feel better: Designing for wellbeing and social values. 54 Jill Brewster1, Michelle Kindleysides2, Justin Marshall1, Jayne Wallace1, and Colin Wilson1 Understanding Informal Carers as Wicked Assets in Health and Social Care 65 Daniel Carey1, Paul Rodgers2, Andy Tennant3 and Katie Dodd4 Ethical Roadmap: Enabling Collaborative Enactment of Ethical Practices in Design and HCI Research Through Open-Source 66 Luis P. Carvalho1, Linnea Iris Groot1, Claire Craig2, Jayne Wallace3, Nantia Koulidou4, Helen Fisher2, Trevor Duncan2, Julie Trueman2, Shaun Lawson5, Kellie Morrissey6, Kyle Montague1 Co-creating poetry for communicating individuals’ emotional experience of living with HIV 67 Caroline Claisse1, Bakita Kasadha2, Abigail Durrant1 Making In The Moment: Insight from Participatory Arts for Co-Design Practice in Dementia Care Settings 78 Henry Collingham, Abigail Durrant and John Vines Finding Synergies Between Indigenous & Designerly Ways of Knowing 86 Brenda Crabtree1, Marlene Erickson2 , Jessica Erickson3, Joy Joseph-McCullough4, Nicole Preissl1,5, Connie Watts1, Charlene Williams4, Caylee Raber5, Lara Therrien Boulos6, Andrew Siu5, Nadia Beyzaei5, Sari Raber7, Sarah Hay5 Co-designing tools for dissemination 95 Claire Craig, Paul Chamberlain Journeying Through Dementia The story of a 14 year design-led research enquiry 105 Claire Craig and Helen Fisher 3 Indoor Living Wall: educational tool for improving eco-health awareness in public school 118 Laura Dominici and Elena Comino Facilitating Users and Designers Towards a Shift of Perspective for True Participation in Co-creation in Health Care: A Holistic Activity Theoretical Approach 128 Siw Eriksson, Pontus Wallgren and MariAnne Karlsson ‘It’s like each individual’s soul is on the table’: Using thematic cards as elicitation tools 136 Rebecka Fleetwood-Smith, Victoria Tischler and Deirdre Robson Change and Novelty for Industrial Designers in Complex Design Projects for Healthcare 137 Berit Godfroij and Remko van der Lugt Living with Hip Osteoarthritis and waiting for surgery in a Brazilian public health context: a patients’ perspective 147 Sara Goldchmit1, Marcelo Cavalheiro de Queiroz2, Nayra Deise dos Anjos Rabelo2, João Alexandre Rodrigues Cavalari2, Walter Ricioli Jr.2, Manoel Carlos Sampaio de Almeida Ribeiro2 and Giancarlo Polesello2 Design Tactics for an Urban-Integrated Dementia Neighbourhood 154 Silvia Maria Gramegna, Alessandro Biamonti, Jing Chen Sparks of innovation: transforming challenges into opportunities 162 Raghavendra Gudar1, Deana McDonagh2, Maurita T. Harris2, and Wendy A. Rogers2 Proactive Design for Injury Prevention of Elite Swimmers: Development of Technical Training Swimwear 170 Tara Halsted, Gözde Göncü Berk An international parallel design studio about designing for well-being in cohousing for older people: Changing perceptions through social engagement in the city 179 Zakia Hammouni1, Gwendoline Schaff2,3, Ann Petermans2 and Tiiu Poldma 1 The contemporary hospital design: a contextual study of the lived experience of healthcare professionals and quality of care 189 Zakia Hammouni Informing HIV Social Care Service Design through Participatory Zine Making 197 Kiersten Hay1, Abigail Durrant1, Lynne Coventry1, Shema Tariq2, and Gill Longfield3 4 Foreword When the Design4Health Conference organising committee collectively chose ‘The Future is Now!’ as the theme for the 2020 conference we had not anticipated a future shaped by the emergence and ensuing devastation of COVID-19. This would have been the sixth Design4Health Conference. In January, plans were well underway with Sabine Wildevuur and colleagues in Amsterdam, hosts of the event. With over 300 submissions from 30 countries, this would have been our largest conference yet. However, a few weeks after a successful review day we began to hear from friends and colleagues affected by the COVID virus. Our priority has always been the health and wellbeing of the wider Design4health community and we made the difficult decision to cancel. In recognition of the time and effort that had been put into crafting submissions, we invited those with accepted abstracts to submit full papers, which would be published in online proceedings. The result is found here - 95 papers across 4 volumes. The papers are an exceptional testament to the Design4Health community. Whilst many do not reference COVID-19 directly, the research themes they interrogate and their exploration of the role of design in creating solutions to societal health challenges are exceptionally relevant. As we move forwards, we recognise the importance of continuing to create opportunities where researchers are able to transcend their own disciplines, to share research and create new intellectual spaces and paradigms. We feel confident, that in these extraordinary and unprecedented times the Design4Health community is well placed to make a difference. On behalf of Lab4Living and the Conference organising Committee, welcome to these proceedings. Claire Craig, Kirsty Christer & Paul Chamberlain (Lab4Living) 5 Reflections from Sabine Wildevuur – host of Design4Health 2020 In September 2018 the decision was taken that the sixth Design4Health Conference 2020 was going to be hosted in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. How happy we were as organizing committee, and started immediately to develop the conference planning in close collaboration with the initiators of D4H - Paul Chamberlain, Claire Craig, and Kirsty Christer - from Lab4Living, Sheffield Hallam University. A team of knowledgeable and enthusiastic people with very different academic backgrounds but all devoted to design for health, was assembled for the Academic Programme Committee and Review Committee. The first milestone for the organisers was the deadline for submissions; the amount of submissions exceeded our wildest expectations. The UK-NL review committee joined forces in the review process. And on a special review day on 23rd of January 2020, in the historic anatomic theatre of Waag in Amsterdam, 20 members of the review committee divided into the teams red, white, blue (indeed, the Dutch flag!), and orange took the decisions on the 347 submissions. There was something in the air that day; a great vibe, a strong bonding feeling, and everyone was looking forward to the first of July 2020, when the official opening of D4H2020 would have taken place, and the D4H community would be (re)united in Amsterdam. The rest is history. We would have loved to welcome you in beautiful Amsterdam. But in April 2020 we had to take the tough decision not to proceed with the conference this year. Keep on the good work on design for health, and remember: The future is now! Special thanks to the members of the organising committee: DesignLab University Twente (Anke de Koning), Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (Somaya Ben Allouch and Nathalie Brommersma), Lab4Living, Sheffield Hallam University (Paul Chamberlain, Claire Craig, and Kirsty Christer), and Waag|society&technology (Paulien Melis). This committee collaborated with 4TU (University Twente (UT), Delft University of Technology (TU Delft), Technical University Eindhoven (TU/e), Wageningen University & Research (WUR). 6 Academic Programme and Review Committee • Armagan Albayrak (TU Delft) • Somaya Ben Allouch (HvA) • Remi Bec (Lab4Living) • Marina Bos-deVos (TU Delft) • Daniel Bossen (HvA) • Paul Chamberlain (Lab4Living) • Kirsty Christer (Lab4Living) • Nazli Cila (HvA) • Claire Craig (Lab4Living) • Jelle van Dijk (UT) • Nick Dulake (Lab4Living) • Paul Emerson (Lab4Living) • Raoul Engelbert (HvA) • Rebecca Jenkin (Lab4Living) • Armagan Karahanoglu (UT) • Saskia Kelders (UT) • Kaisu Koski (Lab4Living) • Joe Langley (Lab4Living) • Peter Lloyd Jones (Lab4Living) • Geke Ludden (UT) • Deger Ozkaramanli (UT) • Ayla Schwarz (WUR) • Monique Simons (WUR) • Lianne Simonse (TU Delft) • Daniel Tetteroo (TU/e) • Lex van Velsen (Roessingh R&D, UT) • Peter Weijs (HvA, VUMC-AMC) • Gemma Wheeler (Lab4Living) • Sabine Wildevuur (UT)
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