Development of a culturally specific heart failure self-management iPad teaching tool for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
conference contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00authored byN Buitendyk, R Clark, Bronwyn Fredericks, M Adams, J Atherton, J Howie-Esquivel, K Dracup, CJ Wu
This paper describes the initial phases of the Fluid Watchers Pacific Rim project: a participatory action research project that involves developing and trialling an iPad app to provide monitoring and self-care for Indigenous Australians with heart failure. The development phase involved working with health experts, an IT team and Indigenous heart-failure patients through three cycles of development and critical reflection. This was followed by a small pilot study to examine the app’s effectiveness. In this paper, the researchers explain why IT-supported health education can be successful in decreasing re-hospitalisation and improving self-management skills. They describe the steps they took to ensure community participation and ownership of the project and present the findings of their pilot study. This pilot project suggests that an iPad app may be a practical and successful way to provide health-care support for Indigenous Australian heart-failure patients.
History
Start Page
1
End Page
10
Number of Pages
10
Start Date
2013-01-01
Location
Auckland, New Zealand
Publisher
Australasian Cardiac Nursing College
Place of Publication
Qld.
Peer Reviewed
No
Open Access
No
External Author Affiliations
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies; Flinders University; Office of Indigenous Engagement; Queensland Health; Queensland University of Technology; Queensland University of Technology; University of California, San Francisco;