Macroergonomic components of the patient work system shaping dyadic care management during adolescence: a case study of type 1 diabetes

Ergonomics. 2024 May 7:1-21. doi: 10.1080/00140139.2024.2343942. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The role of the social, physical, and organisational environments in shaping how patients and their caregivers perform work remains largely unexplored in human factors/ergonomics literature. This study recruited 19 dyads consisting of a parent and their child with type 1 diabetes to be interviewed individually and analysed using a macroergonomic framework. Our findings aligned with the macroergonomic factors as presented in previous models, while highlighting the need to expand upon certain components to gain a more comprehensive representation of the patient work system as relevant to dyadic management. Examples of design efforts that should follow from these findings include expanding existing data sharing options to include information from the external environment and capitalising on the capabilities of artificial intelligence as a decision support system. Future research should focus on longitudinally assessing patient work systems throughout transition periods in addition to more explicitly exploring the roles of social network members.

Keywords: Patient work system; care transitions; caregiving; healthcare ergonomics; macroergonomics.

Plain language summary

Work performed by patients and their caregivers is shaped by the social, physical, and organisational contexts they are embedded within. This paper explored how adolescents with type 1 diabetes managed their health alongside their parents in the context of these macroergonomic factors. These findings have implications for research and design.