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| Funder | The Dunhill Medical Trust |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of Sheffield |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Jun 01, 2022 |
| End Date | Jul 01, 2025 |
| Duration | 1,126 days |
| Data Source | Europe PMC |
| Grant ID | SLEF2110\15 |
This project aims to: 1) understand the needs and desires of older people with different backgrounds regarding their future care, support, and housing and living arrangements; 2) identify emerging technology-enabled products and services that are likely to have an impact on independent living, care support and the living environment for older people with care and support needs, and develop methods to monitor and influence the development of such products and services, and assess their potential added value on a regular basis, using a multi-stakeholder co-design/co-decide approach; 3) develop a “living lab”, a realistic cyber-socio-physical environment in which new solutions and care concepts can be tested and evaluated and adapted to meet people’s needs.
The project consists of five work packages, one focusing on management of the project, three addressing the above-mentioned aims, and one focusing on dissemination and sustainability. WP1 includes all project management activities.
In WP2 we will identify and analyse the needs and aspirations of current clients of Johnnie Johnson Housing/Astraline (JJH/A) and clients on their waiting lists.
In addition, we will assess the needs/aspirations of communities who currently do not use or have access to such services, whether that be for economic or cultural reasons. We will endeavour to understand how new technologies can be tools for enabling greater inclusivity. We will conduct surveys and in-depth interviews with people drawn from each of these three groups.
The result will be an overview of what current and potential future clients find important in terms of housing arrangements and technological support.
WP3 will focus on identifying emerging products and services that may have an impact on care, support and housing for older people, and on developing a systematic, critical methodology to monitor, on an ongoing basis, the development of such products and services and to assess their potential added value.
We will develop a method to regularly scan the relevant literature, conferences and exhibitions.
To assess the potential added value of new products and services, we will develop a set of key criteria that are important for decisions about their introduction, starting with the set of technical criteria JJH/A currently uses for such decisions, augmented with aspects like expected added value, cost-benefit, safety and security, user acceptance, usability, the risk of increasing inequalities, etc.
As a third element of this WP we will, together with older people, informal carers, care professionals, housing and health and social care organisations, technology suppliers and other relevant stakeholders, design a co-decision process for assessing the potential of new products and services. In WP4 we develop a “living lab” with JJH/A in which new products and care concepts can be tested/evaluated.
Living labs are user-centred ecosystems whereby innovations can be developed and tested in an open and inclusive manner.
In this case, the core of this living lab will be a panel of actual clients of JJH/A who are willing to experiment with new products in their own homes.
For the evaluation of these new products and services a standardised toolkit with assessment criteria and procedures, linked to the criteria used in WP2, will be developed. Products and services that ‘pass the test’ of the process designed in WP3 will be evaluated in this living lab.
As part of this initiative a junior researcher will live in one of the housing facilities as an ‘embedded researcher’.
Under appropriate conditions, this living lab will be made available to external parties who would seek to better understand their users and their environments through co-design processes or who wish to have their products and services evaluated in real settings. In WP5 the results of this project will be disseminated.
They will directly feed into the work and strategy of JJH/A but will also be made available to other organisations.
Findings will be published in a series of scientific publications, including a PhD thesis, and industry publications within the housing, health and care sectors.
In addition, we well develop and implement a sustainable and equitable exploitation model for the living lab and assessment methodologies.
The ultimate aim of the project is to develop mechanisms to respond to changing care needs and to exploit technical opportunities to meet these needs.
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