User-designed information tools to support communication and care coordination in a trauma hospital

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbi.2009.03.007Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Abstract

Background

In response to inherent inadequacies in health information technologies, clinicians create their own tools for managing their information needs. Little is known about these clinician-designed information tools. With greater appreciation for why clinicians resort to these tools, health information technology designers can develop systems that better meet clinicians’ needs and that can also support clinicians in design and use of their own information tools.

Objective

To describe the design characteristics and use of a clinician-designed information tool in supporting information transfer and care coordination

Design

Observations, semi-structured interviews, and photographing were used to collect data. Participants were six nurse coordinators in a high-volume trauma hospital. Content analysis was carried out and interactions with information tools were analyzed.

Results

Nurse coordinators used a paper-based information tool (a nurse coordinator’s clipboard) that consisted of the compilation of essential data from disparate information sources. The tool was assembled twice daily through (1) selecting and formatting key data from multiple information systems (such as the unit census and the EHR), (2) data reduction (e.g., by cutting and whitening out non-essential items from the print-outs of computerized information systems), (3) bundling (e.g., organizing pieces of information and taping them to each other), and (4) annotating (e.g., through the use of colored highlighters and shorthand symbols). It took nurse coordinators an average of 41 min to assemble the clipboard. The design goals articulated by nurse coordinators to fit the tool into their tasks included (1) making information compatible with the mobile nature of their work, (2) enabling rapid information access and note-taking under time pressure, and (3) supporting rapid information processing and attention management through the effective use of layout design, shorthand symbols, and color-coding.

Conclusions

Clinicians design their own information tools based on the existing health information technologies to meet their information needs. The characteristics of these clinician-designed tools provide insights into the “realities” of how clinicians work with health information technologies. The findings suggest an often overlooked role for health information technologies: facilitating user creation of information tools that will best meet their needs.

Keywords

Coordination
Computer supported cooperative work
Clinical information systems
EHR
User interfaces
Interdisciplinary communication
Computerized medical records system
Nurses
Qualitative research

Cited by (0)