Day 2 of our time with Laerdal was just as memorable as the
first. Having convinced ourselves that we weren’t jetlagged, we tried again to
wake up for the sunrise - sadly, we snoozed too many alarms and missed it once again. We walked over to Laerdal with Cansu, determined to learn as much as we
could before our field immersions.
Our day began with a meeting with Signe, a midwife currently
studying simulation training methods for postpartum hemorrhage (PPH). She presented research
for her PhD thesis, comparing the treatment of PPH training in
Norway and Tanzania. After her talk describing various approaches and
the use of Mama Natalie within different cultures, we were able to better understand
the importance of self efficacy in training and of training in the team you will work with.
An important takeaway: Understand the cultures we will be
designing for.
We then learned about Laerdal’s design process, from
identifying the challenge to manufacturing the final product, and the outputs of each step in the
process. In this session, we focused on diverging and converging throughout,
from identifying many needs and prototyping multiple solutions to narrowing our ideas down
to the one we choose to pursue.
After learning more about Mama Natalie, we had the chance to
tour the workshop and learn about rapid prototyping from Olav. We saw everything
from silicone molds to large machines, allowing them to use even scrap material
to create prototypes. We also saw eight of the iterations of Mama Natalie that evolved
into the final product - it was very interesting to see how drastically the model
changed through the process.
Important lesson from the tour: Prototype early! No matter
how simple the prototype is so we can get feedback early on.
And then it came time to integrate the entire design process
in a one and a half hour session with Cansu. The five of us and Tor Inge
designed a product to remedy a difficult learning experience for our partners. We
interviewed each other about challenging learning experiences, identified
needs, designed solutions, made prototypes, and got user feedback. From Sakina’s
motor bike simulation to help Ramji learn to drive in different conditions, to
Teja’s program to help Tor Inge learn to play the accordion, to Kendall’s solution
to help me learn to code (by making yellow spirals), we came up with a wide variety
of needs and solutions - in a very short amount of time.
Lessons learned: 1. Ask open ended questions whenever
possible, and 2. sketch out as many solutions as possible (Sketch, not write).
Teja explaining his app to help Tor Inge learn to play the accordion |
We experienced our first (and only) dose of rainy Norwegian
weather after leaving Laerdal. We set off on a short drive to Utstein Abbey, one
of the oldest and best preserved monasteries in Norway. The view on the way
there was gorgeous, with large fields of green flocks of sheep. We had
heard about Utstein guidelines for CPR and training, and knew influential conferences
were still being held in the building. We learned from our guide that abbey had
once housed the King of Norway, and had then been changed to a monastery,
housing monks living on a strict routine. We saw the kloster (outdoor courtyard)
and church, and heard the story of Christopher Garmann.
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Kloster at Utstein Abbey |
Legend has it that when his wife, Cecelia, died. Garmann
promised her that he would not remarry. However, 20 years later, he fell in
love with a women 36 years his junior. As he was at the altar in Stavanger
Cathedral ready to marry again, he collapsed, claiming he saw Cecelia’s ghost
in a white dress in the cathedral. Garmann fell into a coma and died days
later. It is said that the ghost of Cecelia still haunts Utstein Abbey (that
explains the “wind” that mysteriously opened a door for us). And the gloomy,
rainy weather definitely helped set the mood of our ghost story.
The burial site of Christopher and Cecelia Garmann |
After a lengthy discussion about Cecelia and a short nap in
the taxi ride back to Stavanger, we had dinner by the harbor and enjoyed a
slight glimpse of the sunset. We headed back to our rooms for a night of revising
our interview guides and prepping for out last day in Stavanger.
The sunset on the walk back to the hotel (We lucked out with perfect weather for our entire trip) |
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