Designing for Patient Voice in Interactive Health
This addresses an inclusion and epistemic issue for patients in health research, but it is incremental as it builds on existing practices in medical publishing.
The paper tackles the problem that patients' lived experiences are often treated as data rather than knowledge in Interactive Health research, proposing an infrastructural pathway to support patient-authored contributions as a design probe.
Interactive Health (IH) research increasingly engages patients through participatory and user-centred approaches. However, patients' lived experiences are typically treated more as data to be analysed than as knowledge in their own right. In this paper, I argue that 'patient voice' in the field of IH is both an inclusion issue and an epistemic one. More specifically, it concerns how experiential accounts are recognised and circulated. I examine how methodological conventions, authorship norms, review criteria, and publication formats tend to position patients as participants rather than as authors of evidence. Looking to patient-partnered practices in medical publishing, including The BMJ, JAMA, and British Journal of Sports Medicine, I outline a possible infrastructural pathway for supporting patient-authored or patient-led experiential contributions within the field. I present this as a design probe to surface assumptions and trade-offs. I end this paper by inviting the IH community to reflect on how its knowledge infrastructures might accommodate experiential evidence alongside established research forms.