- US spent $7290/person on healthcare & ranked last, Netherlands spent $3837 & ranked first http://j.mp/dcOC9v
- John Haugeland, Philosophy, U of Chicago, 1945–2010, author Artificial Intelligence: The Very Idea, fondly recall him http://j.mp/9xS3Aa #
- World Congress Keynote 7/20/10: What is Happening 2 Drive [Healthcare] Industry Toward Business Process Management? http://j.mp/cQnOjb #
- Avatar understands speech, recognizes pediatric conditions, diagnoses childhood ailments & seriousness http://j.mp/aXMMZ3 # #
- First time attendee last night’s Health Informatics Pulse Meetup # very impressed w/ breadth, depth, & diversity DC’s # crowd
- Asked last night: Everyone-friendly design learn from senior-friendly design? Yes if least experienced can use, all can -Bo Xie UMD #
- Dynamic, contrarian, artistic, funny! RT : @ fanboy! 😉 RT : wow! Paul Roemer rocks!!! You should be here! #
- Using BPM to Drive Clinical Intelligence & Process Oversight in Acute HC: clinical intelligence = business intelligence http://j.mp/aJEoY6
- RT @ … 11 questions … Social BPM http://j.mp/9RV9py < “new patterns of work” relevant 2 # # clinical #
- Attending sold out James Taylor & Carole King concert Verizon Center Washington DC with wife http://twitpic.com/1zdn8f
- Collaborative mobile wiki: add multimedia, shared awareness, browse by time/loc (abstract only) http://j.mp/bmiego clinical # use??
- “Clickorrhea” three # # specific hits in Google, starting 2 hear in conversation # http://bit.ly/boxxGS
- The evolution of #: A multi-agent based model of adaptive bias in human # http://j.mp/96bWWm # #
- Sunrise on Washington DC Chinatown Arch, Happy Longest Day of the Year! http://twitpic.com/1ypgf8 http://bit.ly/QDPFj
- A Context-Aware Approach to Process-based # System Security (pdf) “cross-organizational [HC] processes” http://j.mp/dpQIAd # # #
Month: June 2010
Zowie! Tweets of the Week Ending June 20, 2010: Tufte, Case Management, BPM, Health 2.0
- NHIN Transit Authority http://j.mp/9iunKh via @ < positively Tuftesque http://www.edwardtufte.com
- checklist…easier…2 use time 2 learn patients status…freed from…recall…six steps in establishing an IV http://j.mp/cXPjRY # # # #
- repetitive, lock-step processes…(think pharmacy) [vs] free-form, unstructured…(think emergency room) http://j.mp/cXPjRY # # # #
- What is the Difference Between Case Management & BPM? http://j.mp/b6OR5E < # # clinical # req both 4 # #
- “The cockpit of a jet…is easier 2 learn, more intuitive &…safer to use” http://j.mp/bC4JCU < old post # # # http://j.mp/5lpJww
- BPM returns control of business processes 2 businesses http://j.mp/coAZNP < # # BPM returns control of clinical processes 2 clinicians
- “One of the most non-intuitive, confusing & clunky user interfaces ever designed” http://j.mp/aPc2Ym < familiar? No not # # > pre #
- Oldie goldie (2001) Workflow Management Systems: Healthcare Technology of the Future http://j.mp/9EvbU4 # # # clinical #
- #Health20 # paper Info channels, Augmented reality, Location/social computing, Virtual worlds, Collaborative research http://j.mp/aPrAwR
Zowie! Tweets of the Week Ending June 13, 2010: Clinical Groupware; Captain Sullenberger; Intuitive vs. Intuitable EMRs; Import of Recognition, Achievement, and Personal Growth to EHR Usability
- .@ import of motivation reminds me of import experience, transformation, emotion & meaning of # # adoption http://j.mp/6ke8Y5
- .@ re motivation vs # in # # design http://bit.ly/9PzZqe < UR right “recognition, achievement, personal growth” R key
- Health/Medicine 2.0 46 definitions: tech, patients, professionals, social networking, info/content, collaboration, change http://j.mp/ahWUy4
- “Web 2.0 & Semantic Web apps…can only B fully understood by studying them from a historical perspective” http://j.mp/cCCykX # #
- “intuitable” vs “Intuitive” # # clinical # http://j.mp/9MrbNK < user figure-outable vs figures-user-out #
- I’m wishing there was more “hallway conversations” at the # # via @ < need “hallways” 4 that http://www.venuegen.com
- #HIMSSVirtual # # # # # pain point http://bit.ly/bLUsE5 via @ < see my post on this topic http://j.mp/67LjOx
- @ what do you think of Zend?
- @ “Happy Birthday PHP…revolutionize healthcare” < what’s your favorite PHP dev. env. & why?
- #BPM…process 4 registering, diagnosing, & rehabilitating injured soldiers…more efficient http://j.mp/befKlg # # # #
- #EMR…problems…error…workflow is just not conducive 2 point-and-click http://bit.ly/aEOwyT < drive # # w/ workflow engine # #
- The Future of Data « ScienceRoll http://ow.ly/1VKLb via @ “Imagine a totally transparent healthcare system” < processes too!
- By By Birdie: Why Twitter Is On The Outs http://j.mp/bkzhS5 Alas poor Twitter! I knew him…a fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy
- @ need, by analogy, bundles of clinical functionality 2 add 2 a platform as easily as downloading & installing zipped extension files
- @ WordPress, Joomla, MediaWiki etc extensions, plugins, modules R relevant 2 modular componentized # # clinical # yes?
- Intriguing comparison of cloud/SaaS rapidity of delivery vs BPM rapidity of customization (course both is fastest of all) http://j.mp/cfD9x4
- New Blog on Health IT & Policy: Faisal Qureshi’s Meaningful Uses http://www.meaningfuluses.com < Congratulations! > @ to us tweeps
- New Blog on Health IT & Policy: Faisal Qureshi’s Meaningful Uses http://www.meaningfuluses.com/index.php < Congratulations!
- “ECM vendors…starting to embed workflow functionality into their products” http://j.mp/bsGgHq « # # # too, albeit more slowly
- Blog Post: What Kind of #, # & Clinical Groupware Would Captain Sullenberger Design? http://j.mp/cHqfKc # # #
- “case management…single patient. #…improve the overall outcome of health care…across all patients” http://j.mp/d7kve3 # # #
Zowie! Tweets for the Week Ending June 6, 2010: BPM Maturity in Healthcare, Hicks Law, Workflow-Driven EMR/EHR User Interfaces, Rolling Thunder
- “case management…single patient. #…improve the overall outcome of health care…across all patients” http://j.mp/d7kve3 # # #
- Shock Absorbers That Generate Power for Cars “kinetic energy of bounces to generate watts” NYT http://j.mp/ce19Eg
- Kickbiked to SummerFest & Atlanta’s Piedmont Park today: hot, humid & happy! http://twitpic.com/1uad3e http://www.vahi.org/summerfest.html
- “long lists of options…pressed for time…pick the wrong option” http://j.mp/cYKacH < Hicks Law, my post http://j.mp/7fbVl1 # # #
- “templating vs. free text in EMR documentation…seconds instead of minutes…click…maintaining eye contact with the patient” http://j.mp/drxcPK
- Intro to # Tech: Rep. of Healthcare Processes in Workflow Editor & Execution in Workflow Engine http://j.mp/azOm76 # # #
- “Android devices will take *new approaches* that target…a new segment of physicians” http://j.mp/dc9iZy < better # # than trad # #
- Who else uses “workflow-driven user interfaces”? Airline check-in kiosks http://j.mp/cdiVJs & # # workflow systems http://j.mp/8qh8p2
- “application will…disappear from…user’s perception…flow with…user’s mental processes” http://j.mp/9HNGyx C also http://j.mp/ajEVjy # #
- New Workflow-Driven User Interface # # # # # # # # # # http://j.mp/9HNGyx
- Using Wikis With # & BPM http://j.mp/dgBi8z < Comparison of Wikis & BPM, slides 13-14, Unstructured # & Structured # are similar
- Why does the healthcare industry have the lowest # maturity? http://j.mp/bem19O Interesting because BPM advanced in Netherlands # #
- Froyo and iPhone OS4.0: the OS battle heats up http://j.mp/9G0K6k
- “workflow killers…workflow busting…as high as a 50% deinstallation rate” http://bit.ly/9jtfXk < arg for simple UI driven by workflow engine!
- ” # bottleneck has moved on. BPM process design & process execution – Been there, did that, next…” http://j.mp/9uoQ3a not yet 4 # #
- More Rolling Thunder pics (250,000 bikers!) Flags http://twitpic.com/1sjo78 rolling Wall http://twitpic.com/1sjmkz http://twitpic.com/1sjll0
- Washington DC Rolling Thunder 2010: Flags on Bikes http://twitpic.com/1sj4mo http://twitpic.com/1sj5l6 http://www.rollingthunder1.com
What Kind of EHR Would Sully Design?
Short Link: http://j.mp/cHqfKc
I was there, March 4th in Atlanta, to hear Captain Sullenberger speak at the HIMSS conference about patient safety. It was more than just a great speech; it was a tour de force. His first speech post-retirement, the question and answer period included “thank you”s, questions, comments, and personal accounts that were, at turns, grateful, angry (at systemic problems), and inspired (and in one case, tearful).
Keynoter Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger at HIMSS
(26x zoom from the rear of the hall!)
I meant to post this account immediately, post HIMSS, but I found that I simply wasn’t ready to do so. It made me think that much. I didn’t want to post until my ruminations about what he said had settled, though I’ll save my personal and professional reactions for a later post. I will note here that Captain Sullenberger has a graduate degree in Industrial Psychology from Purdue, with a concentration in human factors, a frequent topic of this blog as it relates to EMR usability.
That I waited may be serendipitous. The issues Captain Sullenberger addressed, including the relationship between EMR usability and patient safety, are more hotly debated now than at any time previously.
Nota bene, while I am a pretty good note taker, I am not a professional stenographer. The following are my paraphrases of a subset of Captain Sullenberger’s remarks, the subset that seemed most relevant to combined issues of EMR usability, medical error, and patient safety. Phrases in bold are my emphasis. I’ll likely return to them in a future post.
Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger began:
- I seem to have become the public face of a remarkable event
- it was really a story of preparation, teamwork, and initiative that saved the day
- in these thirty years my profession has evolved in ways that other professions may not have had to
- both aviation and medicine are high stakes endeavors
- today I ask this question, could the practice of medicine become as safe as aviation has become? What would make that possible?
- what methods can we take from my industry and my domain and be applied to the field of medicine
- we have learned a lot which we are anxious to share with you
- all electronic systems must be made simple and intuitive to the user that has to use them and it is important that the end users be involved in their design from the very beginning
- a complicated system that for example requires the user to click forty boxes…or one that blasts a bright alert for every minor problem does not add value, in fact such complicated systems can create more safety problems than they solve
- in addition to expanding our ability to collect and share information aviation began to focus on improving human performance in the 1980’s with crew resource management, or CRM
- because we are all fallible humans we need a system to ensure that we do every step every time
- aviation has many complex systems and medicine has many more, relying on human memory to navigate them is untenable
- in aviation we have evidence-based checklists to help us cross-check that killer items have been complete properly every time
- a check list is not just a piece of paper, what makes a check list effective is not even the words on that piece of paper, what makes it effective is discipline, the attitude, the behaviors that go along with it
- a check list promotes teamwork, creates a share sense of responsibility, formalizes best practices, encourages two-way communication, requires effective leadership and followership…who knew that a piece of paper could do all that
- some professionals worry that relying too heavily on checklists will turn them into procedural robots
- But that’s simply not true
- paradoxically strong procedural competence … gives you the flexibility to face the unexpected
- I always knew that there couldn’t be a checklist for everything and that there is no substitute for experience
- I know that some in the medical field take issue with equating aviation with medicine
- planes are not as sick as some of their patients and while it is true that medicine operates with less certainty than aviation we deal with more uncertainty than is generally recognized
- just as in manufacturing automobiles where quality must be designed in and built in not inspected in afterward
- In aviation and in medicine safety usability must be designed and built into the very fabric of the process not inspected in after the fact
- safety is too important to be managed by exception
- after 75 years [aviation] has benefits from lessons learned at great cost, literally bought in blood, lessons we know offer up to the medical profession for the taking
- accidents are hardly ever the result of a single cause, but the last link in a causal chain
- I am hopeful you will make these changes in the field of medicine, If you do ultimately it will be for three reasons, your patients deserve it, your colleagues expect it, your profession demands it
My question to you, and me, is:
What Kind of EMRs, EHRs, and Clinical Groupware Would Captain Sullenberger Design?
P.S. Follow me on Twitter at .
March of the EMR / EHR Workflow Engines
http://www.sagehealth.com/products/ehr/intergy_ehr/Pages/intergy_ehr_overview.aspx
http://www.dicardiology.net/node/28070
http://www.purkinje.com/en/support-client/new-workflow-driven-user-interface/
http://www.geniussolutions.com/general/EMR.pdf
http://www.ezemrx.in/cms.asp?mmid=4&smid=25&ssrc=25&src1=4
http://www.emrlogic.com/core-products/md-professional.htm
http://www.cbronline.com/news/mckesson_launches_new_versions_of_lytec_ehr_100211
http://www.vitalhealthsoftware.com/solutions/vitalhealth-platform.html