TY - JOUR
T1 - Less Supervising, More Caring
T2 - Design Recommendations for Informal Caregivers’ Co-Participation in Cardiac Telerehabilitation
AU - Erban, Irina Bianca S.
AU - Fruytier, Lonneke
AU - Colombo, Sara
AU - van de Sande, Danny Ajp
AU - Kemps, Hareld
AU - Houben, Steven
AU - Brombacher, Aarnout
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Informal caregivers’ engagement with patient data is becoming increasingly central to CSCW and HCI research on health management. Cardiac telerehabilitation (CTR) technologies generate lifestyle and well-being data that support patients and their families in recovery management, yet informal caregivers’ roles in CTR remain underexplored. Recreational athletes in rehabilitation are an especially under-researched group, despite their and their support system’s unique needs. Focusing on caregivers of recreational athletes, we conducted interviews with ten participants and used six visual scenarios of a dyadic CTR system to explore their perspectives on data and information co-participation. Caregivers reported that co-participation could strengthen dyadic coping and management but emphasized the need to balance important trade-offs. We provide design recommendations for dyadic CTR systems that balance care needs and preferences, promoting caregiver involvement in a supportive, non-supervisory role. We contribute to CSCW research by proposing a conceptual shift in technology-mediated rehabilitation care: positioning caregiver-inclusive CTR systems as negotiation tools that support boundary work and balance competing care values.
AB - Informal caregivers’ engagement with patient data is becoming increasingly central to CSCW and HCI research on health management. Cardiac telerehabilitation (CTR) technologies generate lifestyle and well-being data that support patients and their families in recovery management, yet informal caregivers’ roles in CTR remain underexplored. Recreational athletes in rehabilitation are an especially under-researched group, despite their and their support system’s unique needs. Focusing on caregivers of recreational athletes, we conducted interviews with ten participants and used six visual scenarios of a dyadic CTR system to explore their perspectives on data and information co-participation. Caregivers reported that co-participation could strengthen dyadic coping and management but emphasized the need to balance important trade-offs. We provide design recommendations for dyadic CTR systems that balance care needs and preferences, promoting caregiver involvement in a supportive, non-supervisory role. We contribute to CSCW research by proposing a conceptual shift in technology-mediated rehabilitation care: positioning caregiver-inclusive CTR systems as negotiation tools that support boundary work and balance competing care values.
KW - Cardiac Telerehabilitation
KW - Caregiver Involvement
KW - Data Interaction
KW - Informal Caregivers
KW - Recreational Athletes
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105019326421&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3757623
DO - 10.1145/3757623
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105019326421
SN - 2573-0142
VL - 9
SP - CSCW442
JO - Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction
JF - Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction
IS - 7
ER -