Saleem Jason J, Plew William R, Speir Ross C, Herout Jennifer, Wilck Nancy R, Ryan Dale Marie, Cullen Theresa A, Scott Jean M, Beene Murielle S, Phillips Toni
Human Factors Engineering, Health Informatics, Office of Informatics and Analytics, Veterans Health Administration, Washington, DC, USA; Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY, USA.
Human Factors Engineering, Health Informatics, Office of Informatics and Analytics, Veterans Health Administration, Washington, DC, USA.
Int J Med Inform. 2015 Jul;84(7):500-11. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2015.03.006. Epub 2015 Mar 24.
This study evaluated the current use of commercial-off-the-shelf Clinical Information Systems (CIS) for intensive care units (ICUs) and Anesthesia Record Keeping (ARK) for operating rooms and post-anesthesia care recovery settings at three Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMCs). Clinicians and administrative staff use these applications at bedside workstations, in operating rooms, at nursing stations, in physician's rooms, and in other various settings. The intention of a CIS or an ARK system is to facilitate creation of electronic records of data, assessments, and procedures from multiple medical devices. The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Office of the Chief of Nursing Informatics sought to understand usage barriers and facilitators to optimize these systems in the future. Therefore, a human factors study was carried out to observe the CIS and ARK systems in use at three VAMCs in order to identify best practices and suggested improvements to currently implemented CIS and ARK systems.
We conducted a rapid ethnographic study of clinical end-users interacting with the CIS and ARK systems in the critical care and anesthesia care areas in each of three geographically distributed VAMCs. Two observers recorded interactions and/or interview responses from 88 CIS and ARK end-users. We coded and sorted into logical categories field notes from 69 shadowed participants. The team transcribed and combined data from key informant interviews with 19 additional participants with the observation data. We then integrated findings across observations into meaningful patterns and abstracted the data into themes, which translated directly to barriers to effective adoption and optimization of the CIS and ARK systems.
Effective optimization of the CIS and ARK systems was impeded by: (1) integration issues with other software systems; (2) poor usability; (3) software challenges; (4) hardware challenges; (5) training concerns; (6) unclear roles and lack of coordination among stakeholders; and (7) insufficient technical support. Many of these barriers are multi-faceted and have associated sub-barriers, which are described in detail along with relevant quotes from participants. In addition, regionalized purchases of different CIS and ARK systems, as opposed to enterprise level purchases, contributed to some of the identified barriers. Facilitators to system use included (1) automation and (2) a dedicated facility-level CIS-ARK Coordinator.
We identified barriers that explain some of the challenges with the optimization of the CIS and ARK commercial systems across the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). To help address these barriers, and evolve them into facilitators, we categorized report findings as (1) interface and system-level changes that vendors or VA healthcare systems can implement; (2) implementation factors under VA control and not under VA control; and (3) factors that may be used to inform future application purchases. We outline several recommendations for improved adoption of CIS and ARK systems and further recommend that human factors engineering and usability requirements become an integral part of VA health information technology (HIT) application procurement, customization, and implementation in order to help eliminate or mitigate some of the barriers of use identified in this study. Human factors engineering methods can be utilized to apply a user-centered approach to application requirements specification, application evaluation, system integration, and application implementation.
本研究评估了三家退伍军人事务医疗中心(VAMC)重症监护病房(ICU)使用的现成商用临床信息系统(CIS)以及手术室和麻醉后护理恢复室使用的麻醉记录保存(ARK)系统的当前使用情况。临床医生和行政人员在床边工作站、手术室、护士站、医生办公室及其他各种场所使用这些应用程序。CIS或ARK系统的目的是便于创建来自多个医疗设备的数据、评估和程序的电子记录。美国退伍军人事务部(VA)护理信息学主任办公室试图了解使用障碍和促进因素,以便未来优化这些系统。因此,开展了一项人因学研究,观察三个VAMC使用中的CIS和ARK系统,以确定最佳实践,并对当前实施的CIS和ARK系统提出改进建议。
我们对三个地理分布的VAMC中重症监护和麻醉护理区域与CIS和ARK系统交互的临床终端用户进行了快速人种志研究。两名观察员记录了88名CIS和ARK终端用户的交互情况和/或访谈回答。我们对69名参与观察的人员的现场记录进行了编码并分类到逻辑类别中。该团队将来自另外19名参与者的关键信息提供者访谈数据与观察数据进行了转录和合并。然后,我们将观察结果整合为有意义的模式,并将数据提炼为主题,这些主题直接转化为CIS和ARK系统有效采用和优化的障碍。
CIS和ARK系统的有效优化受到以下因素阻碍:(1)与其他软件系统的集成问题;(2)可用性差;(3)软件挑战;(4)硬件挑战;(5)培训问题;(6)利益相关者角色不明确且缺乏协调;(7)技术支持不足。其中许多障碍是多方面的,并有相关的子障碍,文中将详细描述这些障碍,并附上参与者的相关引述。此外,与企业级采购不同,不同CIS和ARK系统的区域化采购也造成了一些已确定的障碍。系统使用的促进因素包括(1)自动化和(2)一名专门的机构级CIS-ARK协调员。
我们确定了一些障碍,这些障碍解释了退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)在优化CIS和ARK商业系统方面面临的一些挑战。为了帮助克服这些障碍,并将其转化为促进因素,我们将报告结果分类为:(1)供应商或VA医疗系统可以实施的界面和系统级更改;(2)VA可控和不可控的实施因素;(3)可用于为未来应用采购提供信息的因素。我们概述了一些改进CIS和ARK系统采用率的建议,并进一步建议人因工程和可用性要求应成为VA健康信息技术(HIT)应用采购、定制和实施的一个组成部分,以帮助消除或减轻本研究中确定的一些使用障碍。人因工程方法可用于将以用户为中心的方法应用于应用需求规范、应用评估、系统集成和应用实施。