2010
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2009.000422
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Cognitive work analysis to evaluate the problem of patient falls in an inpatient setting

Abstract: Objective To identify factors in the nursing work domain that contribute to the problem of inpatient falls, aside from patient risk, using cognitive work analysis. Design A mix of qualitative and quantitative methods were used to identify work constraints imposed on nurses, which may underlie patient falls. Measurements Data collection was done on a neurology unit staffed by 27 registered nurses and utilized field observations, focus groups, time–motion studies and written surveys (AHRQ Hospital Survey on … Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…For example, epilepsy monitoring unit personnel may not have access or decision-making input into the use of waiting areas for patients, thus limiting the ability of an EMU to impact safety in this area. Lack of agreement with use of bed and chair alarms may reflect concerns regarding 'alarm fatigue' that has become a major concern in health care settings [51,52]. The practice of developing patient-specific activity and safety plans showed the strongest level of agreement for tailoring activity and safety to the patient's clinical status and seizure activity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…For example, epilepsy monitoring unit personnel may not have access or decision-making input into the use of waiting areas for patients, thus limiting the ability of an EMU to impact safety in this area. Lack of agreement with use of bed and chair alarms may reflect concerns regarding 'alarm fatigue' that has become a major concern in health care settings [51,52]. The practice of developing patient-specific activity and safety plans showed the strongest level of agreement for tailoring activity and safety to the patient's clinical status and seizure activity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…[8] In health care, partial or complete CWAs have been used to evaluate how anesthetists interact with anesthesia alarm systems, [9] to model anesthesia domains [10] and intensive care unit patients, [11] to design CPOE systems, [12] to study patient falls, [13] and to clarify the patient’s role in preventing and recovering from medical errors. [14] CWA has also been used to facilitate the design of CPOE systems [12] and to understand nurses work processes related to documentation [15] and patient falls.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Effken et al 2001, Miller 2004, Sharp and Helmicki 1998. Other applications include the development of decision support tools (Hajdukiewicz et al 2001;Effken et al 2011), understanding of contributors to inpatient falls (Lopez et al 2010), inpatient medication management system (Pingenot et al 2009) and team working (Ashoori et al 2014). …”
Section: Work Domain Analysis (Wda)mentioning
confidence: 99%