Litcius/Paper detail

Supporting Collaborative Reflection on Personal Values and Health

Andrew Berry, Catherine Lim, Calvin Liang, Andrea L. Hartzler, Tad Hirsch, Dawn M. Ferguson, Zoë A. Bermet, James D. Ralston

2021Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

People with multiple chronic conditions (MCC) need support to identify and articulate how their personal values relate to their health. We drew on previous research involving people with MCC to develop three prototypes for supporting reflection on relationships between values and health. We tested these prototypes in a qualitative study involving 12 people with MCC. We identified benefits and limitations to building on patients' existing visit-preparation practices; revealed varying levels of comfort with deep, exploratory reflection involving a facilitator; and found that reflection oriented toward the future could elicit hopeful attitudes and plans for change, while reflection on the past elicited strong resistance. We discuss these findings in relation to previous literature on designing for reflection in three areas: shifting between self-guided and facilitator-guided reflection, balancing between outcome-oriented and exploratory reflection, and exploring temporality in reflection.

Topics & Concepts

FacilitatorReflection (computer programming)TemporalityExploratory researchPsychologyMedicineSocial psychologySociologyComputer scienceEpistemologyAnthropologyProgramming languagePhilosophyMental Health and Patient InvolvementInterprofessional Education and CollaborationCounseling, Therapy, and Family Dynamics