2018
DOI: 10.1177/1064804618763268
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Getting Better Hospital Alarm Sounds Into a Global Standard

Abstract: The reserved set of audible alarm signals embodied within the global medical device safety standard, IEC 60601-1-8, is known to be problematic and in need of updating. The current alarm signals are not only suboptimal, but there is also little evidence beyond learnability (which is known to be poor) that demonstrates their performance in realistic and representative clinical environments. In this article, we describe the process of first designing and then testing potential replacement audible alarm s… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The collection of perceptual, attentional, collaborative, and workload issues that comprise the alarm problem are all well understood by the human factors and systems engineering communities (Cvach, 2012;Woods, 1995), even if the guidance from these communities is not often incorporated into commercially available clinical alarms. Clinical alarms have been shown to have chronically low discriminability (Edworthy et. al, 2018;Sanderson, Wee, & Lacherez, 2006), poor learnability (Sanderson, Wee, & Lacherez, 2006;Wee & Sanderson, 2006;Williams & Beatty, 2005), low informativeness (Rayo & Moffatt-Bruce, 2015), and an inability to convey appropriate meaning (Patterson, 1989).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The collection of perceptual, attentional, collaborative, and workload issues that comprise the alarm problem are all well understood by the human factors and systems engineering communities (Cvach, 2012;Woods, 1995), even if the guidance from these communities is not often incorporated into commercially available clinical alarms. Clinical alarms have been shown to have chronically low discriminability (Edworthy et. al, 2018;Sanderson, Wee, & Lacherez, 2006), poor learnability (Sanderson, Wee, & Lacherez, 2006;Wee & Sanderson, 2006;Williams & Beatty, 2005), low informativeness (Rayo & Moffatt-Bruce, 2015), and an inability to convey appropriate meaning (Patterson, 1989).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the low performance of the majority of clinical alarms is well-known, the path to designing and implementing high-performing alarms is unclear. Despite the abundance of available knowledge, efforts to effectively resolve the clinical alarm problem have proven unsuccessful over the last 30 years (Block, 2008;Cvach, 2012;Edworthy et. al, 2018;Edworthy & Hellier, 2006;Rayo & Moffat-Bruce, 2015;Sanderson et.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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