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Multi-method laboratory user evaluation of an actionable clinical performance information system: Implications for usability and patient safety
journal contribution
posted on 2020-12-07, 15:00 authored by B Brown, Panagiotis BalatsoukasPanagiotis Balatsoukas, R Williams, M Sperrin, I Buchan© 2017 The Authors Introduction Electronic audit and feedback (e-A&F) systems are used worldwide for care quality improvement. They measure health professionals’ performance against clinical guidelines, and some systems suggest improvement actions. However, little is known about optimal interface designs for e-A&F, in particular how to present suggested actions for improvement. We developed a novel theory-informed system for primary care (the Performance Improvement plaN GeneratoR; PINGR) that covers the four principal interface components: clinical performance summaries; patient lists; detailed patient-level information; and suggested actions. As far as we are aware, this is the first report of an e-A&F system with all four interface components. Objectives (1) Use a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods to evaluate the usability of PINGR with target end-users; (2) refine existing design recommendations for e-A&F systems; (3) determine the implications of these recommendations for patient safety. Methods We recruited seven primary care physicians to perform seven tasks with PINGR, during which we measured on-screen behaviour and eye movements. Participants subsequently completed usability questionnaires, and were interviewed in-depth. Data were integrated to: gain a more complete understanding of usability issues; enhance and explain each other's findings; and triangulate results to increase validity. Results Participants committed a median of 10 errors (range 8–21) when using PINGR's interface, and completed a median of five out of seven tasks (range 4–7). Errors violated six usability heuristics: clear response options; perceptual grouping and data relationships; representational formats; unambiguous description; visually distinct screens for confusable items; and workflow integration. Eye movement analysis revealed the integration of components largely supported effective user workflow, although the modular design of clinical performance summaries unnecessarily increased cognitive load. Interviews and questionnaires revealed PINGR is user-friendly, and that improved information prioritisation could further promote useful user action. Conclusions Comparing our results with the wider usability literature we refine a previously published set of interface design recommendations for e-A&F. The implications for patient safety are significant regarding: user engagement; actionability; and information prioritisation. Our results also support adopting multi-method approaches in usability studies to maximise issue discovery and the credibility of findings.
Funding
Wellcome Trust Research Training Fellowship for BB [104438/Z/14/Z]
History
School
- Design and Creative Arts
Department
- Design
Published in
Journal of Biomedical InformaticsVolume
77Pages
62 - 80Publisher
ElsevierVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
© The authorsPublisher statement
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Elsevier under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Acceptance date
2017-11-12Publication date
2017-11-13Copyright date
2018ISSN
1532-0464eISSN
1532-0480Publisher version
Language
- en
Depositor
Deposit date: 1 December 2020Usage metrics
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No categories selectedKeywords
Clinical auditMedical auditClinical quality managementClinical quality improvementClinical governanceUser interface designClinical decision supportScience & TechnologyTechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineComputer Science, Interdisciplinary ApplicationsMedical InformaticsComputer ScienceDECISION-SUPPORT-SYSTEMSHEALTH-CAREFEEDBACK INTERVENTIONSSAMPLE-SIZESDESIGNQUALITYAUDITRECOMMENDATIONSIMPLEMENTATIONREPRESENTATIONDecision Support Systems, ClinicalEye Movement MeasurementsFeasibility StudiesHumansMedical Records Systems, ComputerizedPatient Care ManagementPatient SafetyPrimary Health CareQuality ImprovementSoftware DesignTask Performance and AnalysisUser-Computer InterfaceBiomedical EngineeringBiological SciencesInformation and Computing SciencesMedical and Health Sciences
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