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Patients and Caregivers as Developers of Medical Devices: An Empirical Study on User Innovation in the Healthcare Sector: Forschungs-/Entwicklungs-/Innovations-Management

Autor Moritz Göldner
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 feb 2021
Moritz Göldner analyzes the unexplored phenomenon of patients and caregivers as innovators with respect to their own unmet medical needs in two complementary studies. In study 1 he uses a mixed-method approach to analyze quantitative data from two datasets on more than 1,100 medical smartphone apps each and qualitative data from 16 interviews with developers of medical apps. He finds substantial evidence that patients and caregivers develop medical apps and shows that those apps receive significantly better ratings than company-developed apps. In study 2 he further explores the commercialization activities of patients and caregivers by analyzing 14 case studies of patients and caregivers who successfully brought their tangible medical device on the market. He finds that those innovators did not maximize their profits, but rather sought to market their devices at reasonable prices to offer access to many other patients. The author discusses these insights and draws conclusions for scholars and managers that are valid beyond this extreme case of user innovation.
 
About the author
Moritz Göldner is an innovation consultant for user-centered innovation in (digital) healthcare. Prior to this position, he was a project manager and research associate at the Institute for Technology and Innovation Management at Hamburg University of Technology. His research interests cover user innovation in healthcare, social innovation, the emergence of new medical technologies, as well as entrepreneurship.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783658320409
ISBN-10: 3658320400
Pagini: 183
Ilustrații: XVI, 183 p. 23 illus., 10 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2021
Editura: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden
Colecția Springer Gabler
Seria Forschungs-/Entwicklungs-/Innovations-Management

Locul publicării:Wiesbaden, Germany

Cuprins

Focus and Scope of this Thesis.- Introduction.- Conceptual Foundations: The Phenomenon of Patients and Caregivers as User Innovators.- Are Patients and Caregivers the Better Innovators? The Case of Medical Smartphone Applications.- Introduction: User Innovation and Medical Smartphone Applications.- Theoretical Background and Hypothesis Development.- Methodology.- Findings.- Discussion.- Preliminary Conclusions.- Introduction: User Entrepreneurs for Social Innovation.- Theoretical Background and Research Questions.- Methodology.- Implications and Conclusion.

Notă biografică

Moritz Göldner is an innovation consultant for user-centered innovation in (digital) healthcare. Prior to this position, he was a project manager and research associate at the Institute for Technology and Innovation Management at Hamburg University of Technology. His research interests cover user innovation in healthcare, social innovation, the emergence of new medical technologies, as well as entrepreneurship.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

Moritz Göldner analyzes the unexplored phenomenon of patients and caregivers as innovators with respect to their own unmet medical needs in two complementary studies. In study 1 he uses a mixed-method approach to analyze quantitative data from two datasets on more than 1,100 medical smartphone apps each and qualitative data from 16 interviews with developers of medical apps. He finds substantial evidence that patients and caregivers develop medical apps and shows that those apps receive significantly better ratings than company-developed apps. In study 2 he further explores the commercialization activities of patients and caregivers by analyzing 14 case studies of patients and caregivers who successfully brought their tangible medical device on the market. He finds that those innovators did not maximize their profits, but rather sought to market their devices at reasonable prices to offer access to many other patients. The author discusses these insights and draws conclusions for scholars and managers that are valid beyond this extreme case of user innovation.


About the author 
Moritz Göldner is an innovation consultant for user-centered innovation in (digital) healthcare. Prior to this position, he was a project manager and research associate at the Institute for Technology and Innovation Management at Hamburg University of Technology. His research interests cover user innovation in healthcare, social innovation, the emergence of new medical technologies, as well as entrepreneurship.