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User Interface Techniques to Reduce Wrong Patient Errors

Awalin Sopan, Catherine Plaisant, Seth Powsner, Ben Shneiderman. User Interface Techniques to Reduce Wrong Patient Errors. Human-Computer Interaction Lab & Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland. A Tale of Two Patients.

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User Interface Techniques to Reduce Wrong Patient Errors

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  1. Awalin Sopan, Catherine Plaisant, Seth Powsner, Ben Shneiderman User Interface Techniques to Reduce Wrong Patient Errors Human-Computer Interaction Lab & Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland

  2. A Tale of Two Patients http://www.nytimes.com/2002/06/18/health/oops-wrong-patient-journal-takes-on-medical-mistakes.html

  3. A Tale of Two Patients Mrs. Morrison, 77 Mrs. Morris, 67 • They were in same hospital floor. • Mrs. Morris was taken to the operation room for the heartsurgery

  4. Problems • A drug administered to wrong patient • Reading of wrong patients’ test results • Patients miss needed treatment • etc.

  5. Is Computerized Patient Order System a Panacea for These Problems?

  6. interruption multitasking fatigue urgency long work-hours

  7. Our Approach • Error Classification • what are the error-scenarios clinicians face • Task Analysis • which stage is more susceptible to a particular type of error • 27 Specific Techniques • what to do, and then how to do it

  8. Error Classification Mistake Slips Failure to recognize

  9. Error Classification Recalling the wrong patient due to short term memory failure, name similarity, unfamiliarity with the patient, fatigue. Mistake Slips Failure to recognize

  10. Error Classification Mistake Mechanical errors such as wrong key press, mouse slip, or errors due to unreadable fonts and too small button size. Slips Failure to recognize

  11. Error Classification Mistake Slips Failures to detect errors due to interruptions, multitasking, absence of relevant information. Failure to recognize

  12. Task Analysis

  13. Task Analysis

  14. Task Analysis

  15. Task Analysis

  16. Task Analysis

  17. UI Techniques:Reduce Mistakes • Facilitate recall: • Provide more context: room number, photo,… • Avoid confusion: • Emphasize the salient features: age, chief complaint,… • Use at least two sources of identification: name, medical record number,…

  18. Facilitate Recall Poor recall strategy, more mistakes

  19. Other Techniques • Allow sorting • Always show patient’s full name • Scan RFID to retrieve the patient • Use indoor location to retrieve the patients

  20. UI Techniques:Reduce Slips • Improve target-selection • Improve text-readability • Highlight target under cursor

  21. Facilitate Selection Poor selection mechanism, more slips

  22. Other Techniques • Highlight row under cursor • Use an icon-based 2D grid instead of list

  23. UI Techniques:Increase Recognition • Draw attention to patient information • Taieb-Maimon et al. : recognition increased from 7% to 43% with photo • Use decision support system

  24. Increase Recognition Poor verification, less error recognition

  25. During Verification

  26. Other Techniques • Use visual summary of patient history • Avoid visual distraction • Re-enter ID

  27. During Confirmation

  28. What Guided Us • Human Error Classification • Attention Theory • Context Recovery Process • Cognitive Task Analysis • User Interface Design Principles • Expert Feedback • Medical Literature

  29. Contributions • Categorization of the error-types, and sources • Suggestions of User Interface remedies • Prototype demonstrating the techniques

  30. Take-away Messages • Small changes in the UI can make big difference in patient safety • Include Clinicians and HCI researchers in the design process • To err is human, the systems should make up for it

  31. www.cs.umd.edu/hcil/WPE www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrwOJIrnsg8 Awalin Sopan, Catherine Plaisant, Seth Powsner, Ben Shneiderman @awalinsopan awalin@cs.umd.edu We thank the Patient-Centered Cognitive Support under the Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects Program (SHARP) from the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (Grant No. 10510592).

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