The Mobile App to Assist with Tattoo-encoded Baby Immunization Records in Africa

Authors

  • Bongkeum JEONG
  • Jesús IBÁÑEZ
  • Nuno NUNES
  • Monchu CHEN

DOI:

Keywords:

Ethnography Design Methods, Cultural Implications, Tattooing as a New Ritual, Child Health Record, Mobile App with NFC

Abstract

This paper describes the design and implementation of a mobile application that assists with the interpretation and generation of tattoos which encode immunization records. That explains the application of ethnography design, in a broad way, to solve the issues of the vaccination system for children in Africa. We have derived the “tattoo of Africa” concept from a design that reflects African cultural backgrounds and have linked it with the health service design process. Tattoos, which have been common in Africa for thousands of years, have been redefined as a new ritual for child health records. Our design is applied to two different artefacts: a baby guide book and a baby bracelet. We also describe our first prototype of the baby bracelet and its related App. The bracelet, which contains an NFC tag with information about the baby’s vaccinations, can be read from or written to any NFC-enabled Android smartphone via the visual interface of the related App. 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Button, G. 2000. The Ethnographic Tradition and Design, Design Studies, 21(4): 319­332.

Dreyfuss, Henry. 2003. Designing for People. Third Ed. New York: Allworth Press.

Epstein, Edmund L.; Kole, Robert, eds. 1998. The Language of African Literature. Africa World Press.

Heath, C. & Luff, P. 1992. Collaboration and Control, Computer-Supported Cooperative Work, 1:69-94.

Heine, Bernd; Heine, Bernd, eds. (2000). African Languages: an Introduction. Cambridge University Press.

Jeong, B. 2015. Ethnography Design for Cultural Implications in Africa. In Proceedings of 2015 KSDS Spring International Conference, Seoul.

Jeong, B. 2014. A Study on Ethnography Methods for Design Strategy. Proceedings of 2014 KSDS Spring International Conference, Seoul, 186-187.

Jeong, B. and Chen, M. 2015. The New Understanding of User-centered Design through the Extension of User Definition and Goal. In Proceedings of HCIK2015, ACM Digital Library, 26-30.

Jeong, B. Chen, M. and Ibanez, J. 2016. A Tattooing for the Child Health Records Design that can Save Lives. In Proceedings of HCIK2016, ACM Digital Library, 15-21.

Jeong, B. 2016. On-Skin Technologies: Aesthetic, Expressive, and Functional Tattoos for Child Health Records. Ubicomp/SWC ’16 Heidelberg, Germany. 937-941.

Li, LiAnne. Personal Interview, designdb, kidp, March 2009.

Smith, R. and Kjaersgaard, M. 2014. Design Anthropology in Participatory Design from Ethnography to Anthropological Critique. In Proceedings of the 13th Participatory Design Conference (PDC ’14), Windhoek, Namibia, 217-218. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2662155.2662209

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umbilical_cord

http://www.africaranking.com/most-spoken-languages-in-africa/

http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?frame=0&search

Downloads

Published

30-06-2018

Issue

Section

Research Articles

How to Cite

[1]
“The Mobile App to Assist with Tattoo-encoded Baby Immunization Records in Africa”, J. Appl. Methods Electron. Comput., vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 10–14, Jun. 2018, Accessed: Nov. 24, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://ijamec.org/index.php/ijamec/article/view/253

Similar Articles

21-30 of 197

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.