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User-centered design of central venous access device documentation
Author(s) -
Swaminathan Kandaswamy,
Anne E. Gill,
Shellie Wood,
Leah McKay,
Jessica Hike,
Melissa Popkin,
Edwin Ray,
Heather Maude,
Crawford Johnston,
T. Kirk White,
Evan Orenstein
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
jamia open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2574-2531
DOI - 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooac011
Subject(s) - documentation , venous access , key (lock) , property (philosophy) , quality (philosophy) , computer science , medicine , perception , psychology , programming language , operating system , surgery , philosophy , catheter , epistemology , neuroscience
Objective Safe care of central venous access devices (CVAD) requires clinicians be able to identify key CVAD properties from insertion until safe removal. Our objective was to design and evaluate interfaces to improve CVAD documentation quality and information retrieval. Materials and Methods We applied user-centered design (UCD) to CVAD property documentation interfaces. We measured expert agreement and front-line clinician accuracy in retrieving key properties in CVADs documented pre- and postimplementation. Results The new approach (1) optimized searches for line types, (2) enabled discrete entry of key properties which propagated to the display name, and (3) facilitated error correction by experts. Expert agreement on key CVAD properties improved from 42% to 83% (P < 0.01). Frontline nurses’ perception of key CVAD properties improved from 31% to 86% (P < 0.01). Ease of use scores improved from 15/100 to 80/100 (P < 0.01). Conclusions UCD significantly improved data quality and nurse perception of CVAD properties to guide subsequent care.

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