Published on in Vol 3, No 1 (2020): Jan-Jun

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/17299, first published .
Clinician Perspectives on the Design and Application of Wearable Cardiac Technologies for Older Adults: Qualitative Study

Clinician Perspectives on the Design and Application of Wearable Cardiac Technologies for Older Adults: Qualitative Study

Clinician Perspectives on the Design and Application of Wearable Cardiac Technologies for Older Adults: Qualitative Study

Journals

  1. Takami M, Fukuzawa K, Kiuchi K, Takemoto M, Nakamura T, Sakai J, Yatomi A, Nakasone K, Sonoda Y, Yamamoto K, Takahara H, Suzuki Y, Tani K, Hirata K. Practical Utility of the Postal Service in Delivering a Self-Fitted, Wearable, Long-Term Electrocardiogram Monitoring Device for Outpatient Care. Circulation Reports 2021;3(5):294 View
  2. Fraser M, Gorely T, O’Malley C, Muggeridge D, Giggins O, Crabtree D. Does Connected Health Technology Improve Health-Related Outcomes in Rural Cardiac Populations? Systematic Review Narrative Synthesis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2022;19(4):2302 View
  3. Rolfe S, McCall V, Gibson G, Pusram A, Robertson J. What works in co-producing assistive technology solutions with older people: a scoping review of the evidence. Ageing and Society 2023:1 View
  4. Kahsay D, Salanterä S, Tommila M, Liukas T, Rosio R, Diji A, Peltonen L. User Needs and Factors Associated With the Acceptability of Audiovisual Feedback Devices for Chest Compression Monitoring in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation. CIN: Computers, Informatics, Nursing 2024;42(8):583 View

Books/Policy Documents

  1. Balasubramanian M, Brommeyer M, Simmonds L, Shafei A. Human-Centered Service Design for Healthcare Transformation. View