RBTV Pro-Vision
Client
Volt Industry
Team
Visual Design UI & UX Design
Role
Travel
Timeline
January 2023
Tia Lupe is a narrative-based healthcare website that educates Latine parents and children through delightful personalized storytelling, informative testimonials, and child-focused educational narratives.
Project Brief
Design a central healthcare resource system for the Latine community of Los Angeles
Problem Identified
The Latine families of Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles’ patients do not have easily accessible, culturally-specific preventative healthcare resources.
Solution
Tia Lupe - a narrative-based healthcare tool that teaches families about preventative care and resources through delightful personalized storytelling, informative testimonials, and child-focused educational narratives.
Stakeholder & Domain Expert Research
We began the project by interviewing domain experts to identify pain points between the Latinx community and the healthcare system.
Desktop Research
Our desktop research gave us some insight into effective methods of preventative care education in the Latine community, and helped us to focus on designing for a specific demographic of Latine patients and patient families.
Ideation
We began the ideation phase by creating stakeholder system maps, current and future state journey maps, and personas to reflect the needs of the community.
System & Stakeholder Maps
Our system and stakeholder maps reflect the relationship between Latinx community patients and the CHLA healthcare system.
Personas
Our personas, Juliana and Luka, were created to help guide our design process and help us to focus on the needs of the Latinx community we discovered through research.
Journey Maps
Our current state journey map was created to reflect the current process of accessing CHLA resources. It highlights the pain points of patients feeling overwhelmed by the amount of paperwork given to them while seeking care for their children - which often keeps patients from utilizing any hospital resources at all.
However, in our future state map that includes the use of Tia Lupe, Juliana is able to readily access important information and is able to learn more about her son’s diabetes. Juliana can use our tool to help educate Luka with the children’s resources. Through the animated characters, games, and child patient testimonials - Luka feels inspired to make lifestyle changes.
Wireframing
Our initial wireframes reflected a larger structure that had separate resources for parents and children. In this larger structure, parents would have access to CHLA resources and programs, condition information, and ways to contact a health advisor. For the sake of time, my team and I zoomed in on the highlighted children’s side of Tia Lupe. Here, children could learn to manage their health condition through animated characters, education games and activities, and video testimonials from kids like them.
Character Design
As a team, we created four characters - Maria, Luna, Miguel, and Antonio. We created and designed each of these characters to help educate and inspire users to live healthy lives - each using their own expertise.
Maria
The Chef Bear
Antonio
The Fitness Tiger
Luna
The Genius Lemur
Miguel
The Emotional Owl
Design System & High-Fidelity Screens
We combined our wireframes with a design system to build out the high-fidelity Tia Lupe structure.
Design System
High Fidelity Screens
Results & Reflection
Usability & SME Testing with Kids
To test the usability and subject matter of Tia Lupe kids, we gained insight from our target age group (5-12 years old.)
Testing with Zhen (7)
Zhen loved any imagery with colors and graphic elements.
She wasn’t familiar with lemurs as an animal, which added a bit of confusion while learning about the characters.
She appeared more engaged with the more visual-based games and printables as opposed to written content.
She found the activity walkthrough to be confusing. The copy in the walkthrough was too advanced for her reading level, and she wasn’t interested in the highlighted sport.
Testing with Joey (6) and Maverick (9)
Joey suggested an audio feature for kids who might better retain information in an audio form.
Maverick and Joey also felt the Lemur may be too obscure of an animal, and suggested a more widely-known animal to represent Luna.
Joey and Maverick learned new things from the experience, specifically the impact of diet on blood sugar levels.
Stakeholder Testing
To gain some insight from our stakeholder at the hospital, I scheduled a meeting with Ali Arnett from the Innovation Team to walk her through our prototype.
Stakeholder Feedback
Consider how content would change through different age groups.
Think about showing the whole structure of Tia Lupe.
Explore more food resources - like grocery list calculators and fast food order guides.
Could be a need for a supplementary physical product.