Healing Fabulations: A dialogic methodology for digital codesign in health research
Cummings, Marissa and Teal, Gemma
Recent research has highlighted the importance of responding to trauma and promoting healing when working with participants in sensitive contexts.
This article presents a new methodology for design research on health topics which combines principles from narrative medicine (health storytelling) with codesign.
In this collaborative, dialogic approach, participatory action research cycles of storytelling are used to inform a process of digital codesign, positioning participants as peer researchers.
The resulting prototypes (termed healing fabulations) are a new type of design artefact which captures each participant’s lived experience while also extending it into a speculative future.
Discussion of the methodology shows how the approach protects participant well-being during research on their health experiences, addresses common criticisms of digital design research, and explores the importance of visual metaphor and aesthetic in design for health. The article concludes with a discussion of the methodology’s replicability and use in future research.