Neue Publikation in International Journal of Human-Computer Studies:
19.11.2014“How do interruptions affect clinician performance in healthcare? Negotiating fidelity, control, and potential generalizability in the search for answers”.
Neue Publikation im special issue “Understanding Multitasking and Interruptions: Coordinating Approaches for New Insights” der Zeitschrift International Journal of Human-Computer Studies: “How do interruptions affect clinician performance in healthcare? Negotiating fidelity, control, and potential generalizability in the search for answers”.
Zusammenfassung (pre-proof):
Interruptions and distractions are a feature of work in most complex sociotechnical systems in which people must handle multiple threads of work. Over the last 10-15 years there has been a crescendo of investigations and reviews into the question of the impact that interruptions and distractions have on safety-critical aspects of healthcare work such as medication administration, but findings are still inconclusive. Despite this, many healthcare communities have taken steps to reduce interruptions and distractions in safety-critical work tasks, a step that will usually do no harm but that may have unintended consequences. Investigations with a higher yield of certainty would provide better evidence and better guidance to healthcare communities. In this viewpoint paper we survey some key papers reporting investigations of interruptions and distractions in the field, in simulators, and in the laboratory. We also survey reports of field interventions to minimise interruptions and distractions with a view to improving the safety of medication administration. To analyse the papers adopting each form of investigation, we use the dimensions of fidelity, formal control exercised, and the potential generalizability to the field. We argue that studies of interruptions and distractions outside the healthcare clinical context, but intended to generalize to it, should become more formally representative of the cognitive context of healthcare work. Research would be improved if investigators would undertake programs of studies that successively achieve fidelity, control, and potential generalizability, or would take the opportunity to improve the design of individual studies.
Sanderson, P., & Grundgeiger, T. (in press). How do interruptions affect clinician performance in healthcare? Negotiating fidelity, control, and potential generalizability in the search for answers. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies.