Pickup Laura, Lang Alexandra, Shipley Lara, Henry Caroline, Carpenter James, McCartney Damon, Butler Matthew, Hayes-Gill Barrie, Sharkey Don
LP Human Factors Ltd, Taunton, United Kingdom.
Trent Simulation and Clinical Skills Centre, Nottingham Universities Hospitals NHS Trust, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
JMIR Hum Factors. 2019 Jun 8;6(2):e12055. doi: 10.2196/12055.
A novel medical device has been developed to address an unmet need of standardizing and facilitating heart rate recording during neonatal resuscitation. In a time-critical emergency resuscitation, where failure can mean death of an infant, it is vital that clinicians are provided with information in a timely, precise, and clear manner to capacitate appropriate decision making. This new technology provides a hands-free, wireless heart rate monitoring solution that easily fits the clinical pathway and procedure for neonatal resuscitation.
This study aimed to understand the requirements of the interface design for a new device by using a human factors approach. This approach combined a traditional user-centered design approach with an applied cognitive task analysis to understand the tasks involved, the cognitive requirements, and the potential for error during a neonatal resuscitation scenario.
Fourteen clinical staff were involved in producing the final design requirements. Two pediatric doctors supported the development of a visual representation of the activities associated with neonatal resuscitation. This design was used to develop a scenario-based workshop. Two workshops were carried out in parallel and involved three pediatric doctors, three neonatal nurses, two advance neonatal practitioners, and four midwives. Both groups came together at the end to reflect on the findings from the separate sessions.
The outputs of this study have provided a comprehensive description of information requirements during neonatal resuscitation and enabled product developers to understand the preferred requirements of the user interface design for the device. The study raised three key areas for the designers to consider, which had not previously been highlighted: (1) interface layout and information priority, as heart rate should be central and occupy two-thirds of the screen; (2) size and portability, to enable positioning of the product local to the baby's head and allow visibility from all angles; and (3) auditory feedback, to support visual information on heart rate rhythm and reliability of the trace with an early alert for intervention while avoiding parental distress.
This study demonstrates the application of human factors and the applied cognitive task analysis method, which identified previously unidentified user requirements. This methodology provides a useful approach to aid development of the clinical interface for medical devices.
已开发出一种新型医疗设备,以满足新生儿复苏期间标准化和便利心率记录这一未被满足的需求。在时间紧迫的紧急复苏中,失败可能意味着婴儿死亡,至关重要的是要及时、准确且清晰地向临床医生提供信息,以便他们能够做出恰当决策。这项新技术提供了一种免提无线心率监测解决方案,该方案能轻松适配新生儿复苏的临床路径和流程。
本研究旨在通过人因学方法了解新设备界面设计的要求。这种方法将传统的以用户为中心的设计方法与应用认知任务分析相结合,以了解新生儿复苏场景中涉及的任务、认知要求以及出错可能性。
十四名临床工作人员参与确定最终的设计要求。两名儿科医生协助绘制了与新生儿复苏相关活动的可视化展示。此设计用于开展基于场景的研讨会。两个研讨会并行进行,参与者包括三名儿科医生、三名新生儿护士、两名高级新生儿从业者和四名助产士。两组人员在最后会合,以思考各自会议的结果。
本研究的成果全面描述了新生儿复苏期间的信息需求,并使产品开发者了解该设备用户界面设计的优先需求。该研究为设计者提出了三个此前未被强调的关键考虑领域:(1)界面布局和信息优先级,因为心率应位于中心位置且占据屏幕的三分之二;(2)尺寸和便携性,以便将产品放置在婴儿头部附近并确保从各个角度都能看到;(3)听觉反馈,以辅助心率节律的视觉信息以及波形的可靠性,并在避免引起家长困扰的同时提供早期干预警报。
本研究展示了人因学和应用认知任务分析方法的应用,该方法识别出了此前未被发现的用户需求。这种方法为医疗设备临床界面的开发提供了一种有用的途径。