Title
Automation and adaptation: nurses' problem-solving behavior following the implementation of bar-coded medication administration technology.
Abstract
The most common change facing nurses today is new technology, particularly bar-coded medication administration technology (BCMA). However, there is a dearth of knowledge on how BCMA alters nursing work. This study investigated how BCMA technology affected nursing work, particularly nurses' operational problem-solving behavior. Cognitive systems engineering observations and interviews were conducted after the implementation of BCMA in three nursing units of a freestanding pediatric hospital. Problem-solving behavior, associated problems, and goals were specifically defined and extracted from observed episodes of care. Three broad themes regarding BCMA's impact on problem solving were identified. First, BCMA allowed nurses to invent new problem-solving behavior to deal with pre-existing problems. Second, BCMA made it difficult or impossible to apply some problem-solving behaviors that were commonly used pre-BCMA, often requiring nurses to use potentially risky workarounds to achieve their goals. Third, BCMA created new problems that nurses were either able to solve using familiar or novel problem-solving behaviors, or unable to solve effectively. Results from this study shed light on hidden hazards and suggest three critical design needs: (1) ecologically valid design; (2) anticipatory control; and (3) basic usability. Principled studies of the actual nature of clinicians' work, including problem solving, are necessary to uncover hidden hazards and to inform health information technology design and redesign.
Year
DOI
Venue
2013
10.1007/s10111-012-0229-4
Cognition, Technology & Work
Keywords
Field
DocType
Adaptation, Problem solving, Health information technology, Bar-coded medication administration (BCMA), Nursing
Workaround,Suicide prevention,Simulation,Usability,Human factors and ergonomics,Health information technology,Psychology,Automation,Occupational safety and health,Critical design
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
15
3
1435-5566
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
5
0.44
20
Authors
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Richard Holden123213.25
A. Joy Rivera-Rodriguez250.44
Hélène Faye350.44
Matthew Scanlon4292.91
Ben-Tzion Karsh530330.56