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基于网络的新冠病毒自我分诊平台的开发与可用性测试

Development and Usability Testing of a Web-based COVID-19 Self-triage Platform.

作者信息

Schrager Justin D, Schuler Keke, Isakov Alexander P, Wright David W, Yaffee Anna Q, Jacobson Kara L, Parker Ruth M, Goolsby Craig

机构信息

Emory University School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia.

National Center for Disaster Medicine and Public Health, Department, Bethesda, Maryland.

出版信息

West J Emerg Med. 2020 Aug 19;21(5):1054-1058. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2020.7.48217.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

The development and deployment of a web-based, self-triage tool for severe respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (COVID-19 disease) aimed at preventing surges in healthcare utilization could provide easily understandable health guidance with the goal of mitigating unnecessary emergency department (ED) and healthcare visits. We describe the iterative development and usability testing of such a tool. We hypothesized that adult users could understand and recall the recommendations provided by a COVID-19 web-based, self-triage tool.

METHODS

We convened a multidisciplinary panel of medical experts at two academic medical schools in an iterative redesign process of a previously validated web-based, epidemic screening tool for the current COVID-19 pandemic. We then conducted a cross-sectional usability study over a 24-hour period among faculty, staff, and students at the two participating universities. Participants were randomly assigned a pre-written health script to enter into the self-triage website for testing. The primary outcome was immediate recall of website recommendations. Secondary outcomes included usability measures. We stratified outcomes by demographic characteristics.

RESULTS

A final sample of 877 participants (mean age, 32 years [range, 19-84 years]; 65.3% female) was used in the analysis. We found that 79.4% of the participants accurately recalled the recommendations provided by the website. Almost all participants (96.9%) found the website easy to use and navigate.

CONCLUSION

Adult users of a COVID-19 self-triage website, recruited from an academic setting, were able to successfully recall self-care instructions from the website and found it user-friendly. This website appears to be a feasible way to provide evidence-based health guidance to adult patients during a pandemic. Website guidance could be used to reduce unnecessary ED and healthcare visits.

摘要

引言

开发并部署一款针对严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(COVID-19疾病)的基于网络的自我分诊工具,旨在防止医疗资源使用量激增,这可以提供易于理解的健康指导,以减少不必要的急诊科(ED)就诊和医疗保健访问。我们描述了这样一款工具的迭代开发和可用性测试。我们假设成年用户能够理解并记住基于网络的COVID-19自我分诊工具提供的建议。

方法

我们召集了两所学术医学院的多学科医学专家小组,对之前经过验证的基于网络的流行病筛查工具进行迭代重新设计,以应对当前的COVID-19大流行。然后,我们在两所参与大学的教职员工和学生中进行了为期24小时的横断面可用性研究。参与者被随机分配一个预先编写的健康脚本,输入到自我分诊网站进行测试。主要结果是对网站建议的即时回忆。次要结果包括可用性指标。我们按人口统计学特征对结果进行分层。

结果

分析中使用了877名参与者的最终样本(平均年龄32岁[范围19 - 84岁];65.3%为女性)。我们发现79.4%的参与者准确回忆起了网站提供的建议。几乎所有参与者(96.9%)都认为该网站易于使用和导航。

结论

从学术环境中招募的COVID-19自我分诊网站成年用户能够成功回忆起网站上的自我护理说明,并认为其用户友好。这个网站似乎是在大流行期间为成年患者提供循证健康指导的一种可行方式。网站指导可用于减少不必要的急诊科就诊和医疗保健访问。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/a6a0/7514387/39e463734e3f/WJEM-21-1054-g001.jpg

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