Applying Human Factors Principles to Mitigate Usability Issues Related to Embedded Assumptions in Health Information Technology Design

BackgroundThere is growing recognition that design flaws in health information technology (HIT) lead to increased cognitive work, impact workflows, and produce other undesirable user experiences that contribute to usability issues and, in some cases, patient harm. These usabi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gibbons, Michael C, Lowry, Svetlana Z, Patterson, Emily S
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2014-12-01
Series:JMIR Human Factors
Online Access:http://humanfactors.jmir.org/2014/1/e3/
id doaj-05e96ae961f84f179c7eb0004e7c1259
record_format Article
spelling doaj-05e96ae961f84f179c7eb0004e7c12592021-05-02T19:28:38ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Human Factors2292-94952014-12-0111e310.2196/humanfactors.3524Applying Human Factors Principles to Mitigate Usability Issues Related to Embedded Assumptions in Health Information Technology DesignGibbons, Michael CLowry, Svetlana ZPatterson, Emily S BackgroundThere is growing recognition that design flaws in health information technology (HIT) lead to increased cognitive work, impact workflows, and produce other undesirable user experiences that contribute to usability issues and, in some cases, patient harm. These usability issues may in turn contribute to HIT utilization disparities and patient safety concerns, particularly among “non-typical” HIT users and their health care providers. Health care disparities are associated with poor health outcomes, premature death, and increased health care costs. HIT has the potential to reduce these disparate outcomes. In the computer science field, it has long been recognized that embedded cultural assumptions can reduce the usability, usefulness, and safety of HIT systems for populations whose characteristics differ from “stereotypical” users. Among these non-typical users, inappropriate embedded design assumptions may contribute to health care disparities. It is unclear how to address potentially inappropriate embedded HIT design assumptions once detected. ObjectiveThe objective of this paper is to explain HIT universal design principles derived from the human factors engineering literature that can help to overcome potential usability and/or patient safety issues that are associated with unrecognized, embedded assumptions about cultural groups when designing HIT systems. MethodsExisting best practices, guidance, and standards in software usability and accessibility were subjected to a 5-step expert review process to identify and summarize those best practices, guidance, and standards that could help identify and/or address embedded design assumptions in HIT that could negatively impact patient safety, particularly for non-majority HIT user populations. An iterative consensus-based process was then used to derive evidence-based design principles from the data to address potentially inappropriate embedded cultural assumptions. ResultsDesign principles that may help identify and address embedded HIT design assumptions are available in the existing literature. ConclusionsEvidence-based HIT design principles derived from existing human factors and informatics literature can help HIT developers identify and address embedded cultural assumptions that may underlie HIT-associated usability and patient safety concerns as well as health care disparities.http://humanfactors.jmir.org/2014/1/e3/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gibbons, Michael C
Lowry, Svetlana Z
Patterson, Emily S
spellingShingle Gibbons, Michael C
Lowry, Svetlana Z
Patterson, Emily S
Applying Human Factors Principles to Mitigate Usability Issues Related to Embedded Assumptions in Health Information Technology Design
JMIR Human Factors
author_facet Gibbons, Michael C
Lowry, Svetlana Z
Patterson, Emily S
author_sort Gibbons, Michael C
title Applying Human Factors Principles to Mitigate Usability Issues Related to Embedded Assumptions in Health Information Technology Design
title_short Applying Human Factors Principles to Mitigate Usability Issues Related to Embedded Assumptions in Health Information Technology Design
title_full Applying Human Factors Principles to Mitigate Usability Issues Related to Embedded Assumptions in Health Information Technology Design
title_fullStr Applying Human Factors Principles to Mitigate Usability Issues Related to Embedded Assumptions in Health Information Technology Design
title_full_unstemmed Applying Human Factors Principles to Mitigate Usability Issues Related to Embedded Assumptions in Health Information Technology Design
title_sort applying human factors principles to mitigate usability issues related to embedded assumptions in health information technology design
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Human Factors
issn 2292-9495
publishDate 2014-12-01
description BackgroundThere is growing recognition that design flaws in health information technology (HIT) lead to increased cognitive work, impact workflows, and produce other undesirable user experiences that contribute to usability issues and, in some cases, patient harm. These usability issues may in turn contribute to HIT utilization disparities and patient safety concerns, particularly among “non-typical” HIT users and their health care providers. Health care disparities are associated with poor health outcomes, premature death, and increased health care costs. HIT has the potential to reduce these disparate outcomes. In the computer science field, it has long been recognized that embedded cultural assumptions can reduce the usability, usefulness, and safety of HIT systems for populations whose characteristics differ from “stereotypical” users. Among these non-typical users, inappropriate embedded design assumptions may contribute to health care disparities. It is unclear how to address potentially inappropriate embedded HIT design assumptions once detected. ObjectiveThe objective of this paper is to explain HIT universal design principles derived from the human factors engineering literature that can help to overcome potential usability and/or patient safety issues that are associated with unrecognized, embedded assumptions about cultural groups when designing HIT systems. MethodsExisting best practices, guidance, and standards in software usability and accessibility were subjected to a 5-step expert review process to identify and summarize those best practices, guidance, and standards that could help identify and/or address embedded design assumptions in HIT that could negatively impact patient safety, particularly for non-majority HIT user populations. An iterative consensus-based process was then used to derive evidence-based design principles from the data to address potentially inappropriate embedded cultural assumptions. ResultsDesign principles that may help identify and address embedded HIT design assumptions are available in the existing literature. ConclusionsEvidence-based HIT design principles derived from existing human factors and informatics literature can help HIT developers identify and address embedded cultural assumptions that may underlie HIT-associated usability and patient safety concerns as well as health care disparities.
url http://humanfactors.jmir.org/2014/1/e3/
work_keys_str_mv AT gibbonsmichaelc applyinghumanfactorsprinciplestomitigateusabilityissuesrelatedtoembeddedassumptionsinhealthinformationtechnologydesign
AT lowrysvetlanaz applyinghumanfactorsprinciplestomitigateusabilityissuesrelatedtoembeddedassumptionsinhealthinformationtechnologydesign
AT pattersonemilys applyinghumanfactorsprinciplestomitigateusabilityissuesrelatedtoembeddedassumptionsinhealthinformationtechnologydesign
_version_ 1721488162649276416