%0 Journal Article %@ 2292-9495 %I JMIR Publications %V 12 %N %P e60825 %T The Research Agenda for Perinatal Innovation and Digital Health Project: Human-Centered Approach to Multipartner Research Agenda Codevelopment %A Amhaz,Haneen %A Chen,Sally Xuanping %A Elchehimi,Amanee %A Han,Kylin Jialin %A Gil,Jade Morales %A Yao,Lu %A Vidler,Marianne %A Berry-Einarson,Kathryn %A Dewar,Kathryn %A Tuason,May %A Prestley,Nicole %A Doan,Quynh %A van Rooij,Tibor %A Costa,Tina %A Ogilvie,Gina %A Payne,Beth A %+ Women's Health Research Institute, H214-4500 Oak Street, Box 42, Vancouver, BC, V6H3N1, Canada, 1 604 875 3459, bpayne@cw.bc.ca %K digital health %K co-design %K digital strategy %K human-centered design %K eHealth %K cocreation %K codevelopment %K perinatal intervention %K quality of care %K digital tools %K pregnancy %K patient autonomy %K patient support %K mobile phone %D 2025 %7 30.1.2025 %9 Original Paper %J JMIR Hum Factors %G English %X Background: Digital health innovations provide an opportunity to improve access to care, information, and quality of care during the perinatal period, a critical period of health for mothers and infants. However, research to develop perinatal digital health solutions needs to be informed by actual patient and health system needs in order to optimize implementation, adoption, and sustainability. Objective: Our aim was to co-design a research agenda with defined research priorities that reflected health system realities and patient needs. Methods: Co-design of the research agenda involved a series of activities: (1) review of the provincial Digital Health Strategy and Maternity Services Strategy to identify relevant health system priorities, (2) anonymous survey targeting perinatal care providers to ascertain their current use and perceived need for digital tools, (3) engagement meetings using human-centered design methods with multilingual patients who are currently or recently pregnant to understand their health experiences and needs, and (4) a workshop that brought together patients and other project partners to prioritize identified challenges and opportunities for perinatal digital health in a set of research questions. These questions were grouped into themes using a deductive analysis approach starting with current BC Digital Health Strategy guiding principles. Results: Between September 15, 2022, and August 31, 2023, we engaged with more than 150 perinatal health care providers, researchers, and health system stakeholders and a patient advisory group of women who were recently pregnant to understand the perceived needs and priorities for digital innovation in perinatal care in British Columbia, Canada. As a combined group, partners were able to define 12 priority research questions in 3 themes. The themes prioritized are digital innovation for (1) patient autonomy and support, (2) standardized educational resources for patients and providers, and (3) improved access to health information. Conclusions: Our research agenda highlights the needs for perinatal digital health research to support improvements in the quality of care in British Columbia. By using a human-centered design approach, we were able to co-design research priorities that are meaningful to patients and health system stakeholders. The identified priority research questions are merely a stepping stone in the research process and now need to be actioned by research teams and health systems partners. %R 10.2196/60825 %U https://humanfactors.jmir.org/2025/1/e60825 %U https://doi.org/10.2196/60825