Abstract

Availability, accessibility, affordability, and appropriateness are among several factors that significantly affect the adoption and diffusion of medical devices in low- and middle-income countries. Design processes that promote early and frequent engagement with stakeholders may increase the impact of medical devices aimed at addressing global health challenges by improving the uptake and sustained use of such devices. Prototypes are tools that can be leveraged to engage stakeholders during front-end design to define the problem, elicit requirements, and obtain feedback on early design concepts. Given the lack of literature that examines the practices for stakeholder engagement with prototypes during front-end design, this study was guided by the following research question: How do global health design practitioners approach stakeholder engagement with prototypes during front-end medical device design? Eleven design practitioners from industry were interviewed; transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis to uncover prototyping behaviors. Transcript level counts of stakeholder groups, prototype forms, and strategies leveraged during stakeholder engagement with prototypes are reported. Based on the analysis of stakeholders, prototypes, and strategies, engagement events that reflect how the global health setting influenced decisions of stakeholder, prototype, and strategy are presented. Participants described challenges associated with: cross-cultural and remote design; the elicitation of contextual requirements; and limited access to resources. Participants devised approaches to overcome these challenges such as: engaging a wide range of stakeholders including proxy users and government stakeholders; developing long-term relationships with community partners; leveraging communication technologies; engaging stakeholders in the real use environment with physical prototypes; using prototypes to bridge the language barrier; ‘polishing’ prototypes; and inviting stakeholders to create and select prototypes. These results could impact approaches to practicing and teaching prototype usage during front-end design in a development setting.

Highlights

  • Health technologies contribute to multifaceted solutions aimed at alleviating the burden of disease in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), but many existing health technologies, including medical de­ vices, seldom reach their full potential to improve global health (Free, 2004; Howitt et al, 2012; Sabet Sarvestani and Sienko, 2018)

  • This study investigated the practices of global health design practi­ tioners for stakeholder engagement using prototypes during the frontend design of medical devices, guided by the following research ques­ tion: How do global health design practitioners approach stake­ holder engagement with prototypes during the front-end design of medical devices?

  • The stakeholders, prototypes, and strategies were leveraged during front-end stakeholder engagements with prototypes, for medical device design in global health settings

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Summary

Introduction

Health technologies contribute to multifaceted solutions aimed at alleviating the burden of disease in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), but many existing health technologies, including medical de­ vices, seldom reach their full potential to improve global health (Free, 2004; Howitt et al, 2012; Sabet Sarvestani and Sienko, 2018). Design recommendations for development engineering include: focusing on local manufacturing to increase the maintainability of devices through the development of local support and expertise; designing de­ vice essential functions with fewer components and readily available parts; and designing devices that can withstand harsh environmental conditions (Howitt et al, 2012)

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