HCMay 17, 2016

Visual TASK: A Collaborative Cognitive Aid for Acute Care Resuscitation

arXiv:1605.05224v119 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses medical errors in acute care for clinicians, but it is incremental as it builds on existing cognitive aid research with new interaction modalities.

The study tackled the problem of low situational awareness during acute care resuscitation by evaluating a collaborative cognitive aid called Visual TASK in simulations, finding that tools like the Microsoft Kinect are unsuitable for high-stress situations and that fixation can extend beyond reference guides to other objects.

Preventable medical errors are a severe problem in healthcare, causing over 400,000 deaths per year in the US in hospitals alone. In acute care, the branch of medicine encompassing the emergency department (ED) and intensive care units (ICU), error rates may be higher to due low situational awareness among clinicians performing resuscitation on patients. To support cognition, novice team leaders may rely on reference guides to direct and anticipate future steps. However, guides often act as a fixation point, diverting the leader's attention away from the team. To address this issue, we conducted a qualitative study that evaluates a collaborative cognitive aid co-designed with clinicians called Visual TASK. Our study explored the use of Visual TASK in three simulations employing a projected shared display with two different interaction modalities: the Microsoft Kinect and a touchscreen. Our results suggest that tools like the Kinect, while useful in other areas of acute care like the OR, are unsuitable for use in high-stress situations like resuscitation. We also observed that fixation may not be constrained to reference guides alone, and may extend to other objects in the room. We present our findings, and a discussion regarding future avenues in which collaborative cognitive aids may help in improving situational awareness in resuscitation.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes