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Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients
by
Pratt, Wanda
, Pollack, Ari H.
in
Cognitive load
/ Electronic health records
/ Health Informatics
/ Online Only
/ Original Investigation
/ Patients
/ Physicians
/ Workloads
2020
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Association of Health Record Visualizations With Physicians’ Cognitive Load When Prioritizing Hospitalized Patients
by
Pratt, Wanda
, Pollack, Ari H.
in
Cognitive load
/ Electronic health records
/ Health Informatics
/ Online Only
/ Original Investigation
/ Patients
/ Physicians
/ Workloads
2020
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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.
Publisher
American Medical Association
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