HCGRSep 10, 2020

A Framework for Evaluating Dashboards in Healthcare

arXiv:2009.04792v237 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of poor usability and ineffective design in healthcare dashboards for professionals and the public, offering an incremental improvement by consolidating existing evaluation methods.

The paper tackles the lack of a consistent approach to evaluating dashboards in healthcare by systematically reviewing literature and deriving seven evaluation scenarios, such as task performance and behavior change, to provide a framework and best practices for assessment.

In the era of "information overload", effective information provision is essential for enabling rapid response and critical decision making. In making sense of diverse information sources, data dashboards have become an indispensable tool, providing fast, effective, adaptable, and personalized access to information for professionals and the general public alike. However, these objectives place a heavy requirement on dashboards as information systems, resulting in poor usability and ineffective design. Understanding these shortfalls is a challenge given the absence of a consistent and comprehensive approach to dashboard evaluation. In this paper we systematically review literature on dashboard implementation in the healthcare domain, a field where dashboards have been employed widely, and in which there is widespread interest for improving the current state of the art, and subsequently analyse approaches taken towards evaluation. We draw upon consolidated dashboard literature and our own observations to introduce a general definition of dashboards which is more relevant to current trends, together with a dashboard task-based classification, which underpin our subsequent analysis. From a total of 81 papers we derive seven evaluation scenarios - task performance, behaviour change, interaction workflow, perceived engagement, potential utility, algorithm performance and system implementation. These scenarios distinguish different evaluation purposes which we illustrate through measurements, example studies, and common challenges in evaluation study design. We provide a breakdown of each evaluation scenario, and highlight some of the subtle and less well posed questions. We conclude by outlining a number of active discussion points and a set of dashboard evaluation best practices for the academic, clinical and software development communities alike.

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