scholarly journals It’s not you, it’s the design - common problems with patient monitoring reported by anesthesiologists: a mixed qualitative and quantitative study

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Tscholl ◽  
Lucas Handschin ◽  
Julian Rössler ◽  
Mona Weiss ◽  
Donat R. Spahn ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Tscholl ◽  
Lucas Handschin ◽  
Julian Rössler ◽  
Mona Weiss ◽  
Donat R. Spahn ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Patient monitoring is critical for perioperative patient safety as anesthesiologists routinely make crucial therapeutic decisions of the information displayed on patient monitors. Research has shown that today's patient monitoring provides room for improvement regarding known issues such as information overload and alarm fatigue. The rationale for this study was to learn more about the problems anesthesiologists face with patient monitors and to provide improvement suggestions for next-generation patient monitoring. METHODS We conducted a two-center qualitative and quantitative study. First, we interviewed 120 anesthesiologists (physicians and nurses) about the topic: "Common problems with patient monitoring in your daily work." Through deductive and inductive coding, we identified themes and subthemes from the interviews. Secondly, we conducted a field survey with a separate group of 25 anesthesiologists who rated their agree- or disagreement with central statements based on the themes identified from the interviews. RESULTS We identified the following six main topics: 1. "Alarms," 2. "Artifacts," 3. "Software," 4. "Hardware," 5. "Human Factors," 6. "System Factors," and 17 sub-topics. The central statements based on each major theme were: 1. “problems with alarm settings complicate the work with patient monitoring.” (96% agreed) 2. “artifacts complicate the assessment of the patient's condition.” (56% agreed) 3. “information overload makes it difficult to get a quick overview of the situation.” (56% agreed) 4. “problems with cables make working with patient monitors tedious.” (88% agreed) 5. “factors related to human performance lead to patient conditions not being perceived on the monitor.” (64% agreed) 6. “Insufficient standardization: Switching back and forth between monitors from different manufacturers makes it difficult to work with patient monitors.” (88% agreed). All statements differed significantly from the neutral opinion. CONCLUSION This study provides an overview of the problems anesthesiologists face with patient monitoring. Some of the issues identified were previously less known, such as problems with monitor cables (e.g., entanglement and worn connectors), human factors (e.g., fatigue and distractions), and systemic factors (e.g., insufficient standardization between manufacturers). According to our findings, an ideal monitor should reduce false positive alarms to a minimum, use as few cables as possible, and be easy to interpret.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Tscholl ◽  
Mona Weiss ◽  
Lucas Handschin ◽  
Donat R. Spahn ◽  
Christoph B. Nöthiger

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Tscholl ◽  
Lucas Handschin ◽  
Julian Rössler ◽  
Mona Weiss ◽  
Donat R. Spahn ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Patient monitoring is critical for perioperative patient safety as anesthesiologists routinely make crucial therapeutic decisions from the information displayed on patient monitors. Previous research has shown that today's patient monitoring has room for improvement in areas such as information overload and alarm fatigue. The rationale of this study was to learn more about the problems anesthesiologists face in patient monitoring and to derive improvement suggestions for next-generation patient monitors. METHODS We conducted a two-center qualitative/quantitative study. Initially, we interviewed 120 anesthesiologists (physicians and nurses) about the topic: common problems with patient monitoring in your daily work. Through deductive and inductive coding, we identified major topics and sub themes from the interviews. In a second step, a field survey, a separate group of 25 anesthesiologists rated their agree- or disagreement with central statements created for all identified major topics. RESULTS We identified the following six main topics: 1. "Alarms," 2. "Artifacts," 3. "Software," 4. "Hardware," 5. "Human Factors," 6. "System Factors," and 17 sub themes. The central statements rated for the major topics were: 1. “problems with alarm settings complicate patient monitoring.” (96% agreed) 2. “artifacts complicate the assessment of the situation.” (56% agreed) 3. “information overload makes it difficult to get an overview quickly.” (56% agreed) 4. “problems with cables complicate working with patient monitors.” (88% agreed) 5. “factors related to human performance lead to critical information not being perceived.” (64% agreed) 6. “Switching between monitors from different manufacturers is difficult.” (88% agreed). The ratings of all statements differed significantly from neutral opinion (all p<0.03). CONCLUSION This study provides an overview of the problems anesthesiologists face in patient monitoring. Some of the issues, to our knowledge, were not previously identified as common problems in patient monitoring, e.g., hardware problems (e.g., cable entanglement and worn connectors), human factor aspects (e.g., fatigue and distractions), and systemic factor aspects (e.g., insufficient standardization between manufacturers). An ideal monitor should transfer the relevant patient monitoring information as efficiently as possible, prevent false positive alarms, and use technologies designed to improve the problems in patient monitoring.


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Turabian Jose Luis ◽  
Minier-Rodriguez Luis Enoc ◽  
Moreno-Ruiz Sandra ◽  
Rodriguez-Almonte Francis Eliant ◽  
Cucho-Jove Raul ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 140-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Tommaso ◽  
Carlo Cavallotti ◽  
Antonio Malvasi ◽  
Daniele Vergara ◽  
Antonio Rizzello ◽  
...  

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