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Addressing infection risk in veterinary practice through the innovative application of interactive 3D animation methods

Addressing infection risk in veterinary practice through the innovative application of interactive 3D animation methods
Addressing infection risk in veterinary practice through the innovative application of interactive 3D animation methods
Antimicrobial resistance is of growing concern in human and animal health. The aim of this study was to raise awareness and perception of risk of infection-related behaviours during routine preparation for veterinary surgery. We took a multi-disciplinary and multi-method approach to ‘make visible, the invisible’ by illustrating how microbial contamination can be spread during the preparation process for surgical procedures. The design-led visualization approach enhanced inter-disciplinary team and workshop participant contributions during the co-development of an innovative digital tool to support training for veterinary practitioners and students. After experiencing the intervention, 92% of 51 participants agreed to change their behaviour and stated an intention to implement an infection control behaviour that aligned with training objectives. The 3D graphics enhanced the delivery of training content by making difficult and abstract contamination concepts easy to understand. A similar approach could be taken for human health applications.
1460-6925
Macdonald, Alastair S.
e7c423c1-50ad-4897-b964-7a4d257a0a43
Chambers, Mark A.
27f325c0-78e4-4a2a-90f1-a5025ce72417
Ragione, Roberto La
1149e502-bd1c-4fa3-bc1d-def43a8be2a2
Wyles, Kayleigh
602f25da-921b-45fa-a770-90dcb374f15e
Poyade, Matthieu
e61d0cc4-1bbf-49dd-9e45-9984dc78f6bf
Wales, Andrew
78a94732-172c-4115-be17-add50d7aa035
Klepacz, Naomi
31061121-a4ac-4a6b-a110-bcc6afd554fd
Kupfer, Tom R.
9eb7c9aa-fcdd-491d-a5b2-0f77a838fe0d
Watson, Fraje
8a2fbc97-ff22-417c-b843-8392bfd4e1c8
Noble, Shona
622c6597-6508-4430-86ca-119e6688f096
Macdonald, Alastair S.
e7c423c1-50ad-4897-b964-7a4d257a0a43
Chambers, Mark A.
27f325c0-78e4-4a2a-90f1-a5025ce72417
Ragione, Roberto La
1149e502-bd1c-4fa3-bc1d-def43a8be2a2
Wyles, Kayleigh
602f25da-921b-45fa-a770-90dcb374f15e
Poyade, Matthieu
e61d0cc4-1bbf-49dd-9e45-9984dc78f6bf
Wales, Andrew
78a94732-172c-4115-be17-add50d7aa035
Klepacz, Naomi
31061121-a4ac-4a6b-a110-bcc6afd554fd
Kupfer, Tom R.
9eb7c9aa-fcdd-491d-a5b2-0f77a838fe0d
Watson, Fraje
8a2fbc97-ff22-417c-b843-8392bfd4e1c8
Noble, Shona
622c6597-6508-4430-86ca-119e6688f096

Macdonald, Alastair S., Chambers, Mark A., Ragione, Roberto La, Wyles, Kayleigh, Poyade, Matthieu, Wales, Andrew, Klepacz, Naomi, Kupfer, Tom R., Watson, Fraje and Noble, Shona (2021) Addressing infection risk in veterinary practice through the innovative application of interactive 3D animation methods. The Design Journal, 24 (1). (doi:10.1080/14606925.2020.1850225).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance is of growing concern in human and animal health. The aim of this study was to raise awareness and perception of risk of infection-related behaviours during routine preparation for veterinary surgery. We took a multi-disciplinary and multi-method approach to ‘make visible, the invisible’ by illustrating how microbial contamination can be spread during the preparation process for surgical procedures. The design-led visualization approach enhanced inter-disciplinary team and workshop participant contributions during the co-development of an innovative digital tool to support training for veterinary practitioners and students. After experiencing the intervention, 92% of 51 participants agreed to change their behaviour and stated an intention to implement an infection control behaviour that aligned with training objectives. The 3D graphics enhanced the delivery of training content by making difficult and abstract contamination concepts easy to understand. A similar approach could be taken for human health applications.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 August 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 December 2020
Published date: 2 January 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470484
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470484
ISSN: 1460-6925
PURE UUID: 687c0e76-baa6-460d-b387-5941845701f8
ORCID for Naomi Klepacz: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7552-8000

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Oct 2022 16:51
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14

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Contributors

Author: Alastair S. Macdonald
Author: Mark A. Chambers
Author: Roberto La Ragione
Author: Kayleigh Wyles
Author: Matthieu Poyade
Author: Andrew Wales
Author: Naomi Klepacz ORCID iD
Author: Tom R. Kupfer
Author: Fraje Watson
Author: Shona Noble

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