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Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients
Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients
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Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients
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Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients
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Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients
Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients
Journal Article

Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients

2020
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Overview
Current electronic health records (EHRs) contribute to increased physician cognitive workload when completing clinical tasks. To assess the association of different design features of an EHR-based information visualization tool with the cognitive load of physicians during the clinical prioritization process. This cross-sectional study included a convenience sample of 29 attending physicians at Seattle Children's Hospital, a large tertiary academic pediatric hospital. Data collection took place from August 2017 through October 2017, and analysis occurred from August to October 2018. Physician participants used 3 prototypes with novel visualizations of simulated EHR data that highlighted 1 of 3 key patient characteristics, as follows: (1) acuity, (2) clinical problem list, and (3) clinical change. Cognitive workload was measured using the NASA Task Load Index (TLX) scale (range, 1-100, with lower scores indicating lower cognitive workload). Cognitive workload was assessed for the 2 following clinical prioritization tasks: (1) finding information for a specific patient and (2) comparing results among patients for each prototype. Participants ranked 5 hypothetical patients from having the highest to the lowest priority in each design. A total of 29 physician participants (15 [52%] men; 14 [48%] women; mean [range] age, 43 [35-58] years; mean [range] time in practice, 11 [3-30] years) completed the study. For task 1, the prototype highlighting clinical change was associated with lower median (interquartile range) NASA TLX scores compared with the prototype highlighting acuity (30.3 [15.2-41.6] vs 48.5 [18.7-59.3]; P = .02). For task 2, the prototype highlighting clinical change was associated with lower median (interquartile range) NASA TLX scores compared with the prototype highlighting the clinical problem list (29.1 [16.3-50.8] vs 43.5 [26.6-55.9]; P = .02). The prototype highlighting clinical change had the lowest TLX score in 17 of 29 rankings (59%) for task 1 (χ24 = 24.4; P < .001) and 18 of 29 rankings (62%) for task 2 (χ24 = 17.2; P = .002). In this study, well-designed EHR-based information visualizations that highlighted and featured clinically meaningful information patterns significantly reduced physician cognitive workload when prioritizing patient needs.