Design Thinking for Digital Health Solutions: Empowering Medical Informatics Students Passed
Wednesday May 24, 2023 10:15 - 11:45 R22
Lecturers: Liesbeth Van Den Berg, Linda Peute
Track: MIE: Education
The integration of design thinking into medical informatics education is essential for development of innovative and effective health information technologies in our work domain. Design thinking is a problem-solving approach which focuses on understanding complex user needs and creating innovative solutions befitting those complex needs. It is a widely used approach for developing user-centered products and services, and distils creative methodologies to improve usability and effectiveness of health information systems.
This workshop discusses use cases for design thinking in medical informatics education, provides an overview of the lessons learned of incorporating design thinking into the curriculum, and will challenge the audience to experiment with two of the design thinking phases. The workshop also outlines the implications of design thinking for medical informatics educators, students and our work field, and provides suggestions for incorporating design thinking into existing medical informatics programs.
Language
English
Seminar type
On site only
Level of knowledge
Advanced
Conference
MIE
Authors
Liesbeth van den Berg, Thomas Engelsma, Linda Peute
Lecturers
Liesbeth Van Den Berg Lecturer
University Lecturer/UX researcher
AmsterdamUMC
Hi there!
My name is Liesbeth van den Berg, I work as an university lecturer in the topics of UX research/design and management communications for the Medical Informatics program at the University of Amsterdam. Happy to chat with you about education, UX, design thinking and blockchain.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/lavdberg/
Linda Peute Lecturer
director and senior Researcher eHealth Living& Learning Lab Amsterdam UMC
Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam
Dr. Linda Peute Leads the eHealth Living&Learning Lab of the Amsterdam UMC and is a User Experience and human factor researcher within the field of Medical Informatics Her research focuses on assessing the value of human factor engineering methods such as user testing and expert evaluation methods in the design and evaluation of Health information Technology (HIT) as key to succesful design of HIT. She is specialized in research and education into cognitive, human-machine and socio-technological factors that may influence the usability, acceptance and successful implementation of interactive healthcare technologies.