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Avoiding Unintended Consequences of Pediatric Blood Order Set Updates through In Situ Usability Testing.
Thompson, Sarah A; Williams, Herb; Rzewnicki, Daniel; Orenstein, Evan; Carter, Alexis; Rollins, Margo; Rogers, Beverly; Kandaswamy, Swaminathan.
Affiliation
  • Thompson SA; IS&T, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Inc, Atlanta, United States.
  • Williams H; Information Services & Technology, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Atlanta, United States.
  • Orenstein E; Pediatrics, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Egleston Hospital, Atlanta, United States.
  • Carter A; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Inc, Atlanta, United States.
  • Rollins M; Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Program, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Atlanta, United States.
  • Kandaswamy S; Emory University, Atlanta, United States.
Appl Clin Inform ; 2024 Jun 25.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38917865
ABSTRACT
Background Blood product ordering is a complex process, and mistakes can lead to patient harm and poor outcomes. Orders and order sets can be designed to help mitigate errors, but major changes in design can unintentionally cause new errors. Objectives (1) Utilize formative in situ usability testing to iteratively improve the design of a redesigned blood product order set prior to go-live, (2) implement changes based on feedback derived from this testing, and (3) Compare the error rate, System Usability Scale (SUS) score, time to task completion, and click counts between the prior order set in use at the time and the revised redesigned order set. Methods A multidisciplinary project team convened to redesign blood product orders and order sets from scratch based on a review of literature and benchmarking against four pediatric academic institutions with the goal of addressing prior ordering errors. The new redesigned blood product order set was iteratively updated via in situ formative usability testing performed with available clinical users using a concurrent think-aloud protocol in real clinical environments. Errors, SUS scores, time to task completion, and click counts were assessed for the revised redesigned order set using summative testing. Results Formative usability testing with 20 participants led to seven design changes in the redesigned order set which reduced the error rate at go-live. Summative usability testing showed that even though the usability scores were only slightly improved for the revised redesigned order set, the error rates in blood orders were significantly decreased. Conclusion Usability testing can identify design errors early in the process which can be rectified prior to implementation, thus avoiding unintended consequences of changes.

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Appl Clin Inform Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Estados Unidos

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Appl Clin Inform Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Estados Unidos