Designing an AI-Enhanced Public Health Care Platform for the Rapidly Aging Population in South Korea: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Study Based on the Design Thinking Approach

Abstract BackgroundSouth Korea is undergoing one of the world’s fastest demographic shifts toward an aging society, with projections indicating that by 2047, half of all households will be led by older adults. While digital health technologies such as mobile health apps and te...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jeongone Seo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2025-08-01
Series:JMIR Research Protocols
Online Access:https://researchprotocols.jmir.org/2025/1/e63094
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Summary:Abstract BackgroundSouth Korea is undergoing one of the world’s fastest demographic shifts toward an aging society, with projections indicating that by 2047, half of all households will be led by older adults. While digital health technologies such as mobile health apps and telemedicine offer promising solutions for promoting healthy aging and reducing health care expenditures, their adoption among older Koreans remains limited. To address these challenges, this study will use a user-centered design thinking approach to develop a public health care platform tailored to the needs of South Korea’s older adults. ObjectiveThe primary objective of this study is to develop and evaluate a user-centered digital health care platform tailored to older adults in South Korea, with the aim of overcoming key barriers, such as low digital literacy, interface complexity, and mistrust in artificial intelligence–driven systems, and ultimately bridging the digital divide in health. MethodsThis mixed methods study will integrate qualitative and quantitative research within a design thinking framework, progressing through 3 operational phases: empathize and define, ideate, and prototype and test. In phase 1, a scoping literature review, field observations at 5 community centers for older people and in-depth interviews with 29 older adults and 15 stakeholders were conducted to identify behavioral barriers and user needs. In phase 2, an open idea contest and expert focus groups were used to generate and prioritize innovative features for the platform. Phase 3 involves co-design workshops, minimum viable product development using a no-code platform, and usability testing with 8 to 10 older adults. ResultsThe research received a grant (HI22C1477) from the Korea Health Industry Development Institute (2023-2025) and ethical approval (2023-01-014) from Sungkyunkwan University. As of July 2025, data collection for phase 2 is ongoing, and preliminary findings are expected by late 2025. ConclusionsBy adopting an inclusive design thinking approach, this study aims to produce a practical and user-centered platform for older adults. The findings will contribute to research on digital health equity and offer actionable insights for community-centered technology design.
ISSN:1929-0748