Huvudbild för Vitalis 2023
Profilbild för The societal impact of a multidisciplinary, adaptive virtual companionship programme for patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.

The societal impact of a multidisciplinary, adaptive virtual companionship programme for patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. Har passerat

Tisdag 23 maj 2023 08:30 - 09:45 R23

Föreläsare: Marian Hurmuz, Stephanie Jansen-Kosterink

Spår: MIE: Human Factors and organizational issues

The Social Return on Investment (SROI) methodology, proposed by the Roberts Enterprise Development Fund (REDF) takes into account the added value for every stakeholder [1]. To our opinion this methodology is an alternative methodology for traditional economic evaluations and very suitable to assess the impact of digital health, even in an early stage of development. Within the European RE-SAMPLE project, the SROI methodology is used to assess the societal impact of the foreseen digital innovation. The project focuses on people who are living with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) accompanied by complex chronic conditions (CCC). To establish impact of the digital innovation developed within the RE-SAMPLE project a participatory approach is followed and together with all stakeholders the needs and preferences of end-users are elicited. The aim of this workshop is not solely to present the SROI method as a methodology to assess the impact the digital health, but also to enthuse others to use this methodology and to provide an alternative for traditional (economic) evaluations. During the workshop the full process of a forecast SROI will be executed together with the attendees in a number of steps, interspersed with presentations to explain the SROI methodology and to present the RE-SAMPLE project. The attendees will learn the basics about the SROI methodology and how this methodology is used within the European RE-SAMPLE project to ensure impact of the digital innovation for every stakeholder (societal impact). Next to this, the attendees will, by means of a group discussion, form a first opinion about the SROI methodology.

Språk

English

Seminarietyp

Enbart på plats

Föreläsningssyfte

Inspiration

Kunskapsnivå

Introduktion

Målgrupp

Chef/Beslutsfattare
Politiker
Tekniker/IT/Utvecklare
Forskare (även studerande)
Studerande
Omsorgspersonal
Vårdpersonal
Patientorganisationer/Brukarorganisationer

Nyckelord

Nytta/effekt
Innovativ/forskning
Test/validering

Konferens

MIE

Författare

Stephanie Jansen - Kosterink, Marian Hurmuz

Föreläsare

Profilbild för Marian Hurmuz

Marian Hurmuz Föreläsare

Researcher
Roessingh Research and Development

Marian Hurmuz, PhD, has a background in health sciences (University of Twente, NL). In 2019, she started working at Roessingh Research and Development (RRD). RRD is an impact lab for personalised health technology, which provides scientific research on innovative healthcare technology with an end-user focus. Marian started as a junior researcher focusing on the use of eHealth in daily lives. In June 2022, she successfully defended her PhD Thesis: "eHealth - In or out of our daily lives? Measuring the (non-)use of eHealth in summative evaluations". Now, she is still working at RRD as a researcher in team Impact (investigating the impact of the health technology for both the users and society).

Profilbild för Stephanie Jansen-Kosterink

Stephanie Jansen-Kosterink Föreläsare

Senior researcher
Roessingh Research and Development

Stephanie Jansen-Kosterink, PhD (female) has a background in human movement science (VU University Amsterdam). Stephanie joined Roessingh Reserach and Development (Impact lab for personalised health technology) in October 2008 and her work mainly focusses on the clinical and social evaluation of eHealth. End 2014 she successfully defended her PhD thesis: “The added value of telemedicine service for physical rehabilitation”. As senior researcher she works (and worked) on various European and national projects (e.g., including FP7-MyoTel, FP7-CLEAR, FP7- PERSSILAA, H20202-Back-Up and H2020-RE-SAMPLE). In these projects, she was responsible for the overall clinical evaluation of the developed eHealth service with end-users in daily clinical practice. Stephanie is a board member of the regional ethical committee and an expert in ethical guidelines for eHealth evaluation in a clinical setting. In 2015 Stephanie passed her GCP-WMO exam and since 2017 she is qualified to use the SROI methods to assess the social impact of personalised health technology / eHealth service.