Executive
Summary (12/1/01)
Our
Project Proposal (as of 10/17/01)
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CMC's Project
- First
Quarter 2001 Project Report
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Misc. Research
Background
on PHCs and ANMs in India
"Unfamiliar Ground:
Designing Technology to Support Rural Healthcare Workers in India." In SIGCHI Bulletin, Volume 30, Number 2,
April, 1998.
"Designing a
Graphical User Interface for Healthcare Workers in Rural India." In CHI 97 Conference Proceedings.
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Publications from thinkcycle.org
Healthcare Web Services for Handheld Devices in Developing Countries
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Lik Mui,
Peter Szolovits, Holly Ladd, Rebecca Riccio : MIT Laboratory for Computer
Science, SATELLIFE |
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Topic: Healthcare Web Services Abstract: This paper discusses the design
rationales for a PDA-based data collection and retrieval application for an
NGO with healthcare operations in Africa. The application is for collecting
and delivering critical information among health professionals working in
“unwired” environments in Africa. The general “unwired” approach based on web
services can be applied to most developing countries settings. |
The Simputer: Radical Simplicity for Universal Access
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V.
Chandru, V.L. Deshpande, S. Garg, R. Hariharan, S. Manohar, M. Mathias, V.
Vinay : The Simputer Trust, Bangalore, India, Email:
simputer@csa.iisc.ernet.in |
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Topic: Collaborative Open-Source Design
Platforms Abstract: The Simputer is a low cost
portable alternative to PCs, by which the benefits of information
technologies can possibly reach across the digital divide. It has a special
role in developing economies because it offers the possibility that
illiteracy is no longer a barrier to handling a computer. A key to bridging
the digital divide is to have shared devices that permit truly simple and
natural user interfaces based on sight, touch and audio. |
Unfamiliar Ground: Designing Technology to Support Rural Healthcare Workers in India
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Mike
Graves*, Sally Grisedale^, and Alexander Grünsteidl : ConceptLabs* (USA),
Excite@Home^ (USA), IDEO (UK) |
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Topic: Infotech for rural development Abstract: To broaden the reach of effective
computing support into new environments requires different technologies from
those we are accustomed to designing and using. One of the key aspects of the
India Healthcare Project is to confront unfamiliar conditions and contexts in
order to prototype effective handheld computing support for rural Indian
healthcare workers. The project involves introducing a technology relatively
new to us (Newton), with unfamiliar characteristics (size, display,
pen-input), to a community of users with which we were initially totally
unfamiliar, doing a job about which we knew virtually nothing. Additionally,
we needed to localize Newton software and the MessagePad hardware for Indian
languages and physical conditions. In this paper, we lay out the challenges
associated with such an undertaking, the strategies we have adopted, the
current chronology of the project, some aspects of our current design, and
our preliminary findings from field testing. |