SEMar 23, 2021

Evaluating Dissemination and Implementation Strategies to Develop Clinical Software

arXiv:2103.12687v1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This addresses the challenge of eliciting software requirements in healthcare for clinicians, but it is incremental as it builds on a previously proposed framework.

The study evaluated a clinical bed management system developed using the D&I Framework, which translates clinical priorities into software requirements, and found that clinicians perceived improvements in functionalities and tasks between 2018 and 2020.

Clinical software has become a significant contribution to support clinical management and intra-hospital processes. In this regard, the success or failure of clinical software is mostly yielded on a suitable requirements elicitation process. Although several techniques and approaches address this process, the complexity of clinical services and the variety of clinicians involved in those services make it challenging to elicit requirements. To address this concern, in our previous work, we have proposed the D&I Framework. This collaborative technique translates clinical priorities into guidelines for eliciting software requirements in the healthcare context using implementation and dissemination strategies. This article evaluates the functionalities and tasks implemented in a clinical bed management system whose requirements were elicited using the D&I Framework. We focused on evaluating clinicians' usability expectation levels using a specific questionnaire executed in 2018 and 2020. The results show that, in comparison with the first release (2018) and the last one (2020), clinicians perceive an improvement in the functionalities and tasks implemented in the system. This study introduces the effects of implementation and dissemination strategies to elicit pragmatic clinical requirements.

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

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