From the Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Departments of Physiology & Biophysics.
Anesth Analg. 2021 Jul 1;133(1):243-250. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000005071.
Modern consumer electronic devices and automobiles are often controlled by interfaces that sense physical gestures and spoken commands. In contrast, patient monitors and anesthesia devices are typically equipped with panel-mounted buttons, dials, and keyboards. The increased use of noncontact gesture-based interfaces in anesthesia may improve patient safety through more intuitive and prompter control of equipment and also through reduced rates of surface contamination. A novel gesture-based controller was designed and retrofitted to a standard GE Solar 8000M patient monitor. This type of technical innovation is rare, due to closely held proprietary input control systems on commercially produced clinical equipment. Nevertheless, we hypothesized that anesthesiologists would find a contactless gesture interface straightforward to use.
A gesture-based interface system was developed to control a Solar 8000M patient monitor using a millimeter-wave radar sensor. The system was programmed to detect noncontact "rotate" and "press" gestures to control the patient monitor by implementing a virtual trim knob for interface control. Fifty anesthesiologists tested a prototype interface and evaluated usability by completing a short questionnaire incorporating modified Likert scales. These evaluations were performed in a nonpatient care environment so that respondents were not adversely task loaded during assessment, also allaying any ethical or safety concerns regarding use of this novel interface for patient management.
Anesthesia hardware was controlled reliably with 2 distinct gestures above the gesture sensor. The gesture-based interface generally was well received by anesthesiologists (8.09; confidence interval, 8.06-8.12 on a 10-point scale), who preferred the simpler "press" gesture to the "rotate" gesture (8.45; 8.39-8.51 vs 7.73; 7.67-7.79 on a 10-point scale; P = .005). The correlation between the preference scores for the 2 gestures from each anesthesiologist was strong (Pearson r = 0.49; 0.25-0.68; P < .001). Advancing level of training (resident, fellow, attending 1-10 years, attending >10 years) was not correlated with preference scores for either gesture (Spearman ρ = -0.02; -0.30 to 0.26; P = .87 for "press" and Spearman ρ = 0.08; -0.20 to 0.35; P = .58 for "rotate").
The use of gesture sensing for controlling anesthesia equipment was well received by a cohort of anesthesiologists. Even though the simpler "press" gesture was preferred over the "rotate" gesture, the intrarespondent correlation indicates that the preference for gestures as a whole is the stronger effect. No adverse relationship was found between acceptability and anesthesia experience level. Gesture sensing is a promising new area to simplify and improve the interaction between the anesthesiologist and the anesthesia workstation.
现代消费类电子产品和汽车通常通过感应物理手势和语音命令的界面进行控制。相比之下,患者监护仪和麻醉设备通常配备有面板安装的按钮、刻度盘和键盘。在麻醉中越来越多地使用非接触式基于手势的界面可能会通过更直观和更及时地控制设备来提高患者安全性,并且还可以降低表面污染的发生率。设计并改装了一种基于新型手势的控制器,以用于标准的 GE Solar 8000M 患者监护仪。由于商业生产的临床设备中采用了严格保密的专有输入控制系统,因此这种类型的技术创新很少见。尽管如此,我们假设麻醉师会发现这种非接触式手势界面易于使用。
开发了一种基于手势的界面系统,使用毫米波雷达传感器来控制 Solar 8000M 患者监护仪。该系统通过为界面控制实现虚拟微调旋钮,被编程为检测非接触式“旋转”和“按压”手势,以控制患者监护仪。五十名麻醉师使用原型界面进行了测试,并通过包含修改后的李克特量表的简短问卷来评估可用性。这些评估是在非患者护理环境中进行的,因此在评估期间不会对回答者造成不利的任务负担,同时也消除了使用这种新颖界面进行患者管理的任何伦理或安全问题。
在手势传感器上方可靠地控制了麻醉硬件。基于手势的界面通常受到麻醉师的欢迎(在 10 分制中得分为 8.09;置信区间为 8.06-8.12),他们更喜欢更简单的“按压”手势而不是“旋转”手势(在 10 分制中分别为 8.45;8.39-8.51 与 7.73;7.67-7.79;P=0.005)。每位麻醉师对两种手势的偏好评分之间存在很强的相关性(皮尔逊 r=0.49;0.25-0.68;P<0.001)。培训水平(住院医师、研究员、1-10 年的主治医生、10 年以上的主治医生)与两种手势的偏好评分均无相关性(Spearman ρ=-0.02;-0.30 至 0.26;P=0.87 用于“按压”,Spearman ρ=0.08;-0.20 至 0.35;P=0.58 用于“旋转”)。
使用手势感应来控制麻醉设备得到了一群麻醉师的认可。尽管更简单的“按压”手势比“旋转”手势更受欢迎,但受访者之间的相关性表明,对手势的整体偏好是更强的影响因素。接受度与麻醉经验水平之间没有发现不良关系。手势感应是简化和改善麻醉师与麻醉工作站之间交互的有前途的新领域。