Litcius/Paper detail

Investigating Daily Practices of Self-care to Inform the Design of Supportive Health Technologies for Living and Ageing Well with HIV

Caroline Claisse, Bakita Kasadha, Simone Stumpf, Abigail Durrant

2022CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We report on a Diary Study investigating daily practices of Self-care by seven UK adults living with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), to understand their routines, experiences, needs and concerns, informing Self-care technology design to support living well. We advance a developing HCI literature evidencing how digital tools for self-managing health do not meet the complex needs of those living with long-term conditions, especially those from marginalised communities. Our evaluation of using a Self-care Diary as Design Probe responds to calls to study Self-care practices so that future digital health tools are better grounded in lived experiences of managing multi-morbidity. We contribute to HCI discourses including Personal Health Informatics, Lived Informatics and Reflection by illuminating psychosocial challenges for practicing and self-reporting on Self-care. We offer design implications from a Critical Digital Health perspective, addressing barriers to technology use related to trust, privacy, and representation, gaining new significance during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Topics & Concepts

Digital healthPsychosocialHealth careInformaticsHealth informaticsParticipatory designPerspective (graphical)PsychologyNursingMedicineComputer sciencePublic healthEngineeringPolitical scienceArtificial intelligenceParallelsMechanical engineeringElectrical engineeringLawPsychiatryInnovative Human-Technology InteractionTechnology Use by Older AdultsMobile Health and mHealth Applications