Impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devices

We present a case study of how research can influence practice in the procurement of healthcare technology based on the CHI+MED project. CHI+MED is concerned with interaction design and the safety of medical devices. It has combined scientific research on underlying human error, and the development...

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Main Authors: Paul Lee, Laura Meagher, Paul Curzon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Alliance for Innovation (EAI) 2016-11-01
Series:EAI Endorsed Transactions on Collaborative Computing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eudl.eu/doi/10.4108/eai.14-10-2015.2261766
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spelling doaj-61572ed5c907407fa7065e335c9a79412020-11-25T02:29:29ZengEuropean Alliance for Innovation (EAI)EAI Endorsed Transactions on Collaborative Computing2312-86232016-11-01271310.4108/eai.14-10-2015.2261766Impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devicesPaul Lee0Laura Meagher1Paul Curzon2Morriston Hospital, SwanseaTechnology Development GroupQueen Mary University of London; p.curzon@qmul.ac.ukWe present a case study of how research can influence practice in the procurement of healthcare technology based on the CHI+MED project. CHI+MED is concerned with interaction design and the safety of medical devices. It has combined scientific research on underlying human error, and the development of engineering tools and techniques based on this science. It has also included a strong stakeholder engagement strand, aiming to ensure that the research has impact. In particular CHI+MED research has directly informed a UKP 2.5 million procurement decision at a Welsh health board, leading to safer equipment being bought. It provided the evidence to support one kind of device being rated more highly due to its ease of safe use. Our research is also the basis of a new approach to evidence-based procurement based on proactively analysing error logs of existing devices. The logs are analysed to determine the strengths and weaknesses of devices to provide evidence for future decisions. It has also contributed to a programme to ensure software that helps reduce errors is used. CHI+MED research has also fed into training programmes. Our research is actively preventing patients being unnecessarily harmed and also saving staff time from not having to work with hard to use technology, so ultimately saving money.http://eudl.eu/doi/10.4108/eai.14-10-2015.2261766safetymedical devicesinteraction designprocurementtraining
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Lee
Laura Meagher
Paul Curzon
spellingShingle Paul Lee
Laura Meagher
Paul Curzon
Impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devices
EAI Endorsed Transactions on Collaborative Computing
safety
medical devices
interaction design
procurement
training
author_facet Paul Lee
Laura Meagher
Paul Curzon
author_sort Paul Lee
title Impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devices
title_short Impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devices
title_full Impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devices
title_fullStr Impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devices
title_full_unstemmed Impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devices
title_sort impact on procurement and training by research on the interaction design of medical devices
publisher European Alliance for Innovation (EAI)
series EAI Endorsed Transactions on Collaborative Computing
issn 2312-8623
publishDate 2016-11-01
description We present a case study of how research can influence practice in the procurement of healthcare technology based on the CHI+MED project. CHI+MED is concerned with interaction design and the safety of medical devices. It has combined scientific research on underlying human error, and the development of engineering tools and techniques based on this science. It has also included a strong stakeholder engagement strand, aiming to ensure that the research has impact. In particular CHI+MED research has directly informed a UKP 2.5 million procurement decision at a Welsh health board, leading to safer equipment being bought. It provided the evidence to support one kind of device being rated more highly due to its ease of safe use. Our research is also the basis of a new approach to evidence-based procurement based on proactively analysing error logs of existing devices. The logs are analysed to determine the strengths and weaknesses of devices to provide evidence for future decisions. It has also contributed to a programme to ensure software that helps reduce errors is used. CHI+MED research has also fed into training programmes. Our research is actively preventing patients being unnecessarily harmed and also saving staff time from not having to work with hard to use technology, so ultimately saving money.
topic safety
medical devices
interaction design
procurement
training
url http://eudl.eu/doi/10.4108/eai.14-10-2015.2261766
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