# Before the Next Shift / 下一班到来之前 Canonical site: https://cn-iqiyi-main.com/ Primary AI text entrypoint: https://cn-iqiyi-main.com/ai.txt Structured JSON entrypoint: https://cn-iqiyi-main.com/knowledge.json Project type: Graduate interaction design / service design / creative media portfolio project. Core concept: Before the Next Shift is a digital care handover passport for elderly stroke survivors living in long-term care communities, nursing homes, rehabilitation centers, or elderly care facilities. It helps rotating caregivers understand a resident's body condition, care preferences, discomfort signals, consent cues, privacy boundaries, and dignity needs before the next shift begins. Core statement: A person is not a care record. 一个人不是一份照护记录。 Final value: The goal is not to make the resident easier to manage. The goal is to make the resident harder to misunderstand. 这个项目的目标不是让老人更容易被管理,而是让老人更不容易被误解。 Routes: - Overview: https://cn-iqiyi-main.com/ - Experience: https://cn-iqiyi-main.com/experience - Research: https://cn-iqiyi-main.com/about - Research redirect: https://cn-iqiyi-main.com/research redirects to /about Navigation: Overview, Experience, Research. Overview page: 1. Hero 2. Problem 3. Real care touchpoints 4. Design Response 5. Experience Preview 6. Research Link Experience page flow: 1. Resident Profile / 老人档案 2. Shift Context / 班次情况 3. Care Passport / 照护护照 4. Privacy Boundary / 隐私边界 5. Care Scenario / 照护情境 6. Handover Card / 交接卡 Research page: 1. Background 2. Target Group 3. Social Problem 4. Research Question 5. Research Methods 6. Key Insights 7. Design Principles 8. System Map 9. User Journey 10. Prototype Testing Plan 11. Ethical Position Essential features: - Resident Profile Selector - Shift Context Briefing - Digital Care Passport - Privacy & Dignity Boundary - Care Scenario Simulation - Next-Shift Handover Card - Research / Design Process Page Advanced portfolio elements: - Real care touchpoints strip with non-identifiable environment/object photo references and source credits. - Before entering the room checklist inside the existing Shift Context step. - Safety anchors hotspot card inside the existing Care Passport step. - Scenario feedback layers: what could be misunderstood, what to check, and dignity principle. - Next-Shift Handover Card modes: Quick View, Full Handover, Print / Copy Version. - Research service framing includes Service Blueprint Lite and From insight to interface mapping. - All prototype data is fictional mock data and local React state only. Photo reference ethics: Visual references use non-identifiable, license-safe care environment imagery. They focus on objects, room details, and entrances, not identifiable patients or suffering imagery. Pexels source pages and credits are retained on the site. Walking-aid and shift-note references are intentionally illustrated placeholders to avoid identifiable vulnerability imagery or private care information. Resident profiles: - Mr. Lin / 林先生, age 76: stroke survivor, right-side weakness, speaks slowly when tired. Risk: new caregivers may rush him or pull his weaker arm. Dignity note: he feels embarrassed when people discuss his body as if he is not present. - Ms. Zhao / 赵女士, age 82: stroke survivor, left-side weakness, reduced appetite after stroke, often expresses discomfort through silence. Risk: pain or discomfort may be missed because she rarely complains directly. Dignity note: she feels safer when caregivers explain each step before touching her. - Mr. Chen / 陈先生, age 79: stroke survivor, balance issues, mild hearing loss, anxious in unfamiliar routines. Risk: new caregivers may move his cup, walking aid, or call bell without realizing these objects help him feel safe. Dignity note: he wants to be asked before personal items are moved. Care passport signal categories: - How I show discomfort / 我如何表达不适 - How I show consent or refusal / 我如何表达同意或拒绝 - How I need physical assistance / 我需要怎样的身体协助 - What should not be moved / 什么不应该被随意移动 - What calms me / 什么让我安心 - What makes me anxious / 什么让我紧张 - Dignity notes / 尊严提示 Privacy boundary: Consent is part of care handover. 同意是照护交接的一部分。 Research question: How might a digital care handover passport help rotating caregivers understand elderly stroke survivors as people, not just as care tasks? 我们如何设计一份数字照护交接护照,帮助轮换护工把中风后老人理解为具体的人,而不只是照护任务? Key insights: 1. Small care details can disappear between shifts. 2. Silence or slow response can be misread as consent. 3. Body-specific preferences matter in everyday care. 4. Medical records do not fully capture dignity, fear, routine, or comfort. 5. Caregivers need quick, actionable, person-centered cues before entering the room. Design principles: 1. Person before task 2. Slow down before touching 3. Make subtle signals visible 4. Do not treat silence as consent 5. Share only what supports care 6. Protect dignity during handover 7. Preserve routines that support safety Ethical position: This prototype does not diagnose stroke, replace medical records, replace nurses, therapists, or doctors, store real patient data, make medical decisions, or tell caregivers what treatment to provide. This prototype supports care handover, preserves personal care context, reduces misunderstanding, slows down assumptions, protects dignity boundaries, and helps caregivers act with more context. Design direction: Warm digital care handover passport. Professional, calm, accessible, human-centered, and suitable for a graduate interaction design portfolio. The interface should feel like a warm digital care document used on a tablet before a caregiver enters a resident's room. Suggested review prompt: Please review https://cn-iqiyi-main.com/ and this brief as a graduate interaction design portfolio project. Focus on clarity, visual hierarchy, accessibility, care ethics, service design framing, and whether the experience can be understood within 2-3 minutes. Do not suggest backend, login, real medical records, real patient data, diagnosis features, external APIs, or additional conceptual features.