The midwife's assistant: designing integrated learning tools to scaffold ultrasound practice

Ultrasound imaging is an effective tool for identifying maternal mortality risk factors. However, the high cost of ultrasound devices and the scarcity of ultrasound training are two major barriers to adoption in the developing world; complicated and expensive medical technologies are unlikely to meet the needs of users with limited opportunities for formal training and continuing education. To address these particular barriers, we have designed an inexpensive ultrasound system composed of off-the-shelf hardware and custom software. Our system is designed for use by rural midwives---often central medical figures in resource-constrained communities. This paper presents our work integrating help and tutorial software into the ultrasound system we developed. Our goal is to supplement a midwife's conceptual and operational knowledge of diagnostic ultrasound through appropriate and adaptive scaffolding. The design of our help system is informed by interviews with sonographers and radiologists in the United States and Uganda, and data collected during two fieldwork visits to Uganda. Through our fieldwork and preliminary evaluations, we have found that in addition to in-context reference material accessible during an exam, midwives need in-depth learning materials that can be accessed outside of a medical exam scenario.

[1]  Alexis Hope,et al.  Adapting collaborative radiological practice to low-resource environments , 2012, CSCW.

[2]  Trina Gorman,et al.  Impact of Low-Cost, On-demand, Information Access in a Remote Ghanaian Village , 2010, 2011 IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference.

[3]  Gaetano Borriello,et al.  Portable antenatal ultrasound platform for village midwives , 2010, ACM DEV '10.

[4]  John F. Canny,et al.  Mobile-izing health workers in rural India , 2010, CHI.

[5]  C. Mathers,et al.  Trends in maternal mortality: 1990 to 2008. Estimates developed by WHO UNICEF UNFPA and The World Bank. , 2010 .

[6]  David G. Novick,et al.  The micro-structure of use of help , 2009, SIGDOC.

[7]  Kentaro Toyama,et al.  Featherweight multimedia for information dissemination , 2009, 2009 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD).

[8]  Brian Levine,et al.  ICTD for healthcare in Ghana: Two parallel case studies , 2009, 2009 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD).

[9]  Oscar D. Andrade,et al.  The macro-structure of use of help , 2009, SIGDOC '09.

[10]  Nancy Taber,et al.  Emergency response: Elearning for paramedics and firefighters , 2008 .

[11]  Analía Amandi,et al.  Personalization in e-learning: the adaptive system vs. the intelligent agent approaches , 2008, IHC.

[12]  Miguel Alemán-Flores,et al.  Computer Vision Techniques for Breast Tumor Ultrasound Analysis , 2008, The breast journal.

[13]  T. Martin McGinnity,et al.  Intelligent User Support in Autonomous Remote Experimentation Environments , 2008, IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics.

[14]  Paul M. Aoki,et al.  Asynchronous remote medical consultation for Ghana , 2008, CHI.

[15]  Kentaro Toyama,et al.  Full-context videos for first-time, non-literate PC users , 2007, 2007 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development.

[16]  Rajesh Veeraraghavan,et al.  Digital Green: Participatory video for agricultural extension , 2007, 2007 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development.

[17]  Rob Hartog,et al.  Proteus: A Lecturer-Friendly Adaptive Tutoring System. , 2007 .

[18]  Michael J. Hannafin,et al.  Scaffolding in technology-enhanced learning environments , 2007, Interact. Learn. Environ..

[19]  Matthew Ellison Embedded user assistance: the future for software help? , 2007, INTR.

[20]  C. Hoang,et al.  Technology-enhanced interactive surgical education. , 2006, The Journal of surgical research.

[21]  Kentaro Toyama,et al.  Text-Free User Interfaces for Illiterate and Semi-Literate Users , 2006, 2006 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development.

[22]  Trevor Grayling A Usability Test of Two Browser- based Embedded Help Systems , 2002 .

[23]  Susan M. Land Cognitive requirements for learning with open-ended learning environments , 2000 .

[24]  E. Wenger Communities of Practice and Social Learning Systems , 2000 .

[25]  T Tolxdorff,et al.  Knowledge-Based System ADNEXPERT to Assist the Sonographic Diagnosis of Adnexal Tumors , 1997, Methods of Information in Medicine.

[26]  G. Kahen,et al.  Health-Care Technology Transfer: Expert and Information Systems for Developing Countries , 1997, Methods of Information in Medicine.

[27]  K. King,et al.  Supporting multi-level medical education with knowledge-based systems. , 1997, Methods of information in medicine.

[28]  Michelle Corbin Nichols,et al.  Online help systems: technological evolution or revolution? , 1996, SIGDOC '96.

[29]  Mark S. Ackerman,et al.  Such easy-to-use systems!: How organizations shape the design and use of online help systems , 1995, COCS '95.

[30]  Tony Cornford,et al.  Medical expert systems for developing countries: Evaluation in practice , 1994 .

[31]  R M Gardner,et al.  Computerized medical care: the HELP system at LDS Hospital. , 1992, Journal of AHIMA.

[32]  Dean F. Sittig,et al.  A strategy for development of computerized critical care decision support systems , 1991, International journal of clinical monitoring and computing.

[33]  R. Evans The HELP system: a review of clinical applications in infectious diseases and antibiotic use. , 1991, M.D. computing : computers in medical practice.

[34]  Georgios I. Doukidis,et al.  The potential for computer-aided diagnosis of tropical diseases in developing countries: An expert system case study , 1990 .

[35]  Raymond C. Houghton,et al.  Online help systems: a conspectus , 1984, CACM.

[36]  Robert S Fenchel,et al.  An integral approach to user assistance , 1981, CHI '81.

[37]  K. Stowman World health statistics. , 1949, The Milbank Memorial Fund quarterly.