Department of Anesthesia, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2012 May 29;12:46. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-12-46.
Anesthesia information management system (AIMS) records should be designed and configured to facilitate the accurate and prompt recording of multiple drugs administered coincidentally or in rapid succession.
We proposed two touch-screen display formats for use with our department's new EPIC touch-screen AIMS. In one format, medication "buttons" were arranged in alphabetical order (i.e. A-C, D-H etc.). In the other, buttons were arranged in categories (Common, Fluids, Cardiovascular, Coagulation etc.). Both formats were modeled on an iPad screen to resemble the AIMS interface. Anesthesia residents, anesthesiologists, and Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (n = 60) were then asked to find and touch the correct buttons for a series of medications whose names were displayed to the side of the entry screen. The number of entries made within 2 minutes was recorded. This was done 3 times for each format, with the 1st format chosen randomly. Data were analyzed from the third trials with each format to minimize differences in learning.
The categorical format had a mean of 5.6 more drugs entered using the categorical method in two minutes than the alphabetical format (95% confidence interval [CI] 4.5 to 6.8, P < 0.0001). The findings were the same regardless of the order of testing (i.e. alphabetical-categorical vs. categorical - alphabetical) and participants' years of clinical experience. Most anesthesia providers made no (0) errors for most trials (N = 96/120 trials, lower 95% limit 73%, P < 0.0001). There was no difference in error rates between the two formats (P = 0.53).
The use of touch-screen user interfaces in healthcare is increasingly common. Arrangement of drugs names in a categorical display format in the medication order-entry touch screen of an AIMS can result in faster data entry compared to an alphabetical arrangement of drugs. Results of this quality improvement project were used in our department's design of our final intraoperative electronic anesthesia record. This testing approach using cognitive and usability engineering methods can be used to objectively design and evaluate many aspects of the clinician-computer interaction in electronic health records.
麻醉信息管理系统(AIMS)的记录应进行设计和配置,以方便准确、快速地记录同时或连续给予的多种药物。
我们提出了两种触摸屏显示格式,用于我们部门新的 EPIC 触摸屏 AIMS。在一种格式中,药物“按钮”按字母顺序排列(即 A-C、D-H 等)。在另一种格式中,按钮按类别排列(普通、液体、心血管、凝血等)。这两种格式都是模仿 iPad 屏幕设计的,类似于 AIMS 界面。然后,让麻醉住院医师、麻醉师和注册护士麻醉师(n=60)查找并触摸显示在输入屏幕一侧的一系列药物的正确按钮。记录在 2 分钟内输入的条目数。每种格式进行 3 次,第 1 种格式随机选择。为了尽量减少学习差异,使用每种格式的第三次试验进行数据分析。
分类格式在两分钟内使用分类方法输入的药物数量平均比字母格式多 5.6 种(95%置信区间[CI]4.5 至 6.8,P<0.0001)。无论测试顺序如何(即字母分类-分类-字母或分类-字母)以及参与者的临床经验年限,结果都是相同的。大多数麻醉提供者在大多数试验中没有(0)错误(N=96/120 试验,下限 95%为 73%,P<0.0001)。两种格式的错误率没有差异(P=0.53)。
在医疗保健中,越来越多地使用触摸屏用户界面。与药物按字母顺序排列的格式相比,在 AIMS 的药物输入触摸屏中,将药物名称按类别排列可以加快数据输入速度。该质量改进项目的结果用于我们部门最终术中电子麻醉记录的设计。这种使用认知和可用性工程方法进行的测试方法可用于客观设计和评估电子健康记录中临床医生-计算机交互的许多方面。