Design and Evaluation of Low-Fidelity Visual Display Prototypes for Multiple Hospital-Acquired Conditions.

Autor: Reeder B; Author Affiliations: College of Nursing (Drs Reeder and Makic and Ms Sutcliffe) and School of Medicine (Drs Morrow, Ouellet, Gritz and Wald), University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora; Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD (Dr Rodrick); and SCL Health, Broomfield, Colorado (Dr Wald)., Makic MBF, Morrow C, Ouellet J, Sutcliffe B, Rodrick D, Gritz M, Wald H
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Computers, informatics, nursing : CIN [Comput Inform Nurs] 2020 Nov; Vol. 38 (11), pp. 562-571.
DOI: 10.1097/CIN.0000000000000668
Abstrakt: Hospital-acquired conditions such as catheter-associated urinary tract infection, stage 3 or 4 hospital-acquired pressure injury, and falls with injury are common, costly, and largely preventable. This study used participatory design methods to design and evaluate low-fidelity prototypes of clinical dashboards to inform high-fidelity prototype designs to visualize integrated risks based on patient profiles. Five low-fidelity prototypes were developed through literature review and by engaging nurses, nurse managers, and providers as participants (N = 23) from two hospitals in different healthcare systems using focus groups and interviews. Five themes were identified from participatory design sessions: Need for Integrated Hospital-Acquired Condition Risk Tool, Information Needs, Sources of Information, Trustworthiness of Information, and Performance Tracking Perspectives. Participants preferred visual displays that represented patient comparative risks for hospital-acquired conditions using the familiar design metaphor of a gauge and green, yellow, and red "traffic light" colors scheme. Findings from this study were used to design a high-fidelity prototype to be tested in the next phase of the project. Visual displays of hospital-acquired conditions that are familiar in display and simplify complex information such as the green, yellow, and red dashboard are needed to assist clinicians in fast-paced clinical environments and be designed to prevent alert fatigue.
Databáze: MEDLINE