Syllabus for Co-Design of Digital Health Innovations
Samskapande av digitala hälsoinnovationer
Syllabus
- 7.5 credits
- Course code: 3HI004
- Education cycle: Second cycle
-
Main field(s) of study and in-depth level:
Medical Science A1N
Explanation of codes
The code indicates the education cycle and in-depth level of the course in relation to other courses within the same main field of study according to the requirements for general degrees:
First cycle
- G1N: has only upper-secondary level entry requirements
- G1F: has less than 60 credits in first-cycle course/s as entry requirements
- G1E: contains specially designed degree project for Higher Education Diploma
- G2F: has at least 60 credits in first-cycle course/s as entry requirements
- G2E: has at least 60 credits in first-cycle course/s as entry requirements, contains degree project for Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Science
- GXX: in-depth level of the course cannot be classified
Second cycle
- A1N: has only first-cycle course/s as entry requirements
- A1F: has second-cycle course/s as entry requirements
- A1E: contains degree project for Master of Arts/Master of Science (60 credits)
- A2E: contains degree project for Master of Arts/Master of Science (120 credits)
- AXX: in-depth level of the course cannot be classified
- Grading system: Fail (U), Pass (G)
- Established: 2020-08-20
- Established by:
- Revised: 2020-08-20
- Revised by: The Educational Board of Medicine
- Applies from: Spring 2021
-
Entry requirements:
120 credits. Proficiency in English equivalent to the Swedish upper secondary course English 6.
- Responsible department: Department of Women's and Children's Health
Decisions and guidelines
The course is part of Uppsala University's work within the European Institute of Innovation & Technology (EIT) Health and targets both professionals and students at all disciplines.
Ideally the course would consist of a mix of people with clinical background, relevant technical background (e.g. software developer, health informatician or computer science), and people with lived experience of being a patient and/or informal caregiver.
Learning outcomes
The course aims at providing in-depth knowledge about digital health innovation based on the needs of patients, family caregivers and healthcare professionals. Interdisciplinary teams of course participants will, in association with stakeholders, identify needs-based problems and in dialogue with target groups (public and patient involvement, PPI) develop solutions for identified problems. Feedback on process and proposed solutions are given by teachers and mentors, course participants (peer learning) and the potential end-users.
The starting point will be concrete and real needs of patients, informal caregivers, and healthcare professionals. Interdisciplinary teams of course participants will, in association with stakeholders, identify needs-based problems and in dialogue with target groups (public and patient involvement, PPI) develop solutions for identified problems. Feedback on process and proposed solutions are given by teachers and mentors, course participants (peer learning) and the potential end-users.
After passing the course, the student should be able to
- Identify problems and challenges with relevant to health and care based on existing settings in, for example, the public and private sector,
- Plan, implement and apply methodology for an innovation project with a user focus and within given timeframes, with a focus om digital health
- Understand the importance of and utilize the knowledge and experience of interdisciplinary groups in developing creative innovation projects
- Describe opportunities and challenges of patient-driven innovation
- Compile, use and critically interpret relevant information for the innovation project
- Give oral and written presentations adapted to different kinds of target groups
- Give constructive feedback to oral and written presentations given by other course participants.
Content
With the citizen's needs in focus and gained knowledge about digital health i, the course participants identify, plan, carries through and evaluate a relevant health innovation project. As support for the work, theory and practical introduction about methods on how to co-create with the intended user of the innovation solution are provided. Theoretical discussions are combined with practical work on how to energize creativity in innovative processes and how project groups can enable productive collaboration. Ideas are tested through meetings with needs-providers, mentors from innovation support organisations and the final solutions is presented to a panel of evaluators and end-users.
Instruction
Place visits, lectures, seminars, project work in teams. Teaching is online and in English.
Assessment
Active participation in mandatory assignments and completion of a project according to instructions ( 4 credits). Oral and written reports ( 3.5 credits).
If there are special reasons for doing so, an examiner may make an exception from the method of assessment indicated and allow a student to be assessed by another method. An example of special reasons might be a certificate regarding special pedagogical support from the University's disability coordinator.
Syllabus Revisions
- Latest syllabus (applies from Spring 2021)
- Previous syllabus (applies from Autumn 2020)
Reading list
Reading list
Applies from: Spring 2021
Some titles may be available electronically through the University library.
-
Leifer, Larry J.;
Lewrick, Michael;
Link, Patrick
The Design Thinking Playbook: Mindful Digital Transformation of Teams, Products, Services, Businesses and Ecosystems
Wiley, 2018