Evaluation of the effect of information integration in displays for ICU nurses on situation awareness and task completion time: A prospective randomized controlled study

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Evaluation of the effect of information integration in displays for ICU nurses on situation awareness and task completion time : A prospective randomized controlled study. / Koch, Sven H.; Weir, Charlene; Westenskow, Dwayne; Gondan, Matthias; Agutter, Jim; Haar, Maral; Liu, David; Görges, Matthias; Staggers, Nancy.

I: International Journal of Medical Informatics, Bind 82, Nr. 8, 08.2013, s. 665-675.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Koch, SH, Weir, C, Westenskow, D, Gondan, M, Agutter, J, Haar, M, Liu, D, Görges, M & Staggers, N 2013, 'Evaluation of the effect of information integration in displays for ICU nurses on situation awareness and task completion time: A prospective randomized controlled study', International Journal of Medical Informatics, bind 82, nr. 8, s. 665-675. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2012.10.002

APA

Koch, S. H., Weir, C., Westenskow, D., Gondan, M., Agutter, J., Haar, M., Liu, D., Görges, M., & Staggers, N. (2013). Evaluation of the effect of information integration in displays for ICU nurses on situation awareness and task completion time: A prospective randomized controlled study. International Journal of Medical Informatics, 82(8), 665-675. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2012.10.002

Vancouver

Koch SH, Weir C, Westenskow D, Gondan M, Agutter J, Haar M o.a. Evaluation of the effect of information integration in displays for ICU nurses on situation awareness and task completion time: A prospective randomized controlled study. International Journal of Medical Informatics. 2013 aug.;82(8):665-675. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2012.10.002

Author

Koch, Sven H. ; Weir, Charlene ; Westenskow, Dwayne ; Gondan, Matthias ; Agutter, Jim ; Haar, Maral ; Liu, David ; Görges, Matthias ; Staggers, Nancy. / Evaluation of the effect of information integration in displays for ICU nurses on situation awareness and task completion time : A prospective randomized controlled study. I: International Journal of Medical Informatics. 2013 ; Bind 82, Nr. 8. s. 665-675.

Bibtex

@article{c7a4ebbc016a4a92b2d5c06d8bdfa683,
title = "Evaluation of the effect of information integration in displays for ICU nurses on situation awareness and task completion time: A prospective randomized controlled study",
abstract = "Objective: The study measured whether nurses' situation awareness would increase and task completion time decrease when they used an integrated information display compared to traditional displays for medication management, patient awareness and team communication. Setting: The Burn Trauma Intensive Care Unit (BTICU) at the University Hospital, University of Utah Health Science Center, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. Participants: 12 experienced BTICU nurses. Measures: Situation awareness (accuracy of the participants' answer) and task completion time (response time from seeing the question to submitting the answer) were measured using paper prototypes of both displays. Study design: Counter-balanced (on display order), repeated-measures design. Main results: Nurses had a higher situation awareness when using the integrated display, with an overall accuracy of 85.3% compared to 61.8% with the traditional displays (odds ratio 3.61, P <.001, 95% CI = 2.34...5.57). Task completion times were nearly half with integrated displays compared to traditional displays (median 26.0 and 42.1 s, hazard ratio 2.31, P <.001, CI = 1.83...2.93). Conclusions: An integrated ICU information display increased nurses' situation awareness and decreased task completion time. Information integration has the potential to decrease errors, increase nurses' productivity and may allow nurses to react faster to a patient's clinical needs. Bidirectional device communication is needed for these displays to achieve full potential in improving patient safety.",
author = "Koch, {Sven H.} and Charlene Weir and Dwayne Westenskow and Matthias Gondan and Jim Agutter and Maral Haar and David Liu and Matthias G{\"o}rges and Nancy Staggers",
year = "2013",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2012.10.002",
language = "English",
volume = "82",
pages = "665--675",
journal = "International Journal of Medical Informatics",
issn = "1386-5056",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Evaluation of the effect of information integration in displays for ICU nurses on situation awareness and task completion time

T2 - A prospective randomized controlled study

AU - Koch, Sven H.

AU - Weir, Charlene

AU - Westenskow, Dwayne

AU - Gondan, Matthias

AU - Agutter, Jim

AU - Haar, Maral

AU - Liu, David

AU - Görges, Matthias

AU - Staggers, Nancy

PY - 2013/8

Y1 - 2013/8

N2 - Objective: The study measured whether nurses' situation awareness would increase and task completion time decrease when they used an integrated information display compared to traditional displays for medication management, patient awareness and team communication. Setting: The Burn Trauma Intensive Care Unit (BTICU) at the University Hospital, University of Utah Health Science Center, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. Participants: 12 experienced BTICU nurses. Measures: Situation awareness (accuracy of the participants' answer) and task completion time (response time from seeing the question to submitting the answer) were measured using paper prototypes of both displays. Study design: Counter-balanced (on display order), repeated-measures design. Main results: Nurses had a higher situation awareness when using the integrated display, with an overall accuracy of 85.3% compared to 61.8% with the traditional displays (odds ratio 3.61, P <.001, 95% CI = 2.34...5.57). Task completion times were nearly half with integrated displays compared to traditional displays (median 26.0 and 42.1 s, hazard ratio 2.31, P <.001, CI = 1.83...2.93). Conclusions: An integrated ICU information display increased nurses' situation awareness and decreased task completion time. Information integration has the potential to decrease errors, increase nurses' productivity and may allow nurses to react faster to a patient's clinical needs. Bidirectional device communication is needed for these displays to achieve full potential in improving patient safety.

AB - Objective: The study measured whether nurses' situation awareness would increase and task completion time decrease when they used an integrated information display compared to traditional displays for medication management, patient awareness and team communication. Setting: The Burn Trauma Intensive Care Unit (BTICU) at the University Hospital, University of Utah Health Science Center, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. Participants: 12 experienced BTICU nurses. Measures: Situation awareness (accuracy of the participants' answer) and task completion time (response time from seeing the question to submitting the answer) were measured using paper prototypes of both displays. Study design: Counter-balanced (on display order), repeated-measures design. Main results: Nurses had a higher situation awareness when using the integrated display, with an overall accuracy of 85.3% compared to 61.8% with the traditional displays (odds ratio 3.61, P <.001, 95% CI = 2.34...5.57). Task completion times were nearly half with integrated displays compared to traditional displays (median 26.0 and 42.1 s, hazard ratio 2.31, P <.001, CI = 1.83...2.93). Conclusions: An integrated ICU information display increased nurses' situation awareness and decreased task completion time. Information integration has the potential to decrease errors, increase nurses' productivity and may allow nurses to react faster to a patient's clinical needs. Bidirectional device communication is needed for these displays to achieve full potential in improving patient safety.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84880047246&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2012.10.002

DO - 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2012.10.002

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23357614

AN - SCOPUS:84880047246

VL - 82

SP - 665

EP - 675

JO - International Journal of Medical Informatics

JF - International Journal of Medical Informatics

SN - 1386-5056

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 50817809