2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.procs.2013.01.063
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Requirements Analysis for Safer Ambulance Patient Compartments

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Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Biorąc pod uwagę, że większość zabiegów ratownicy medyczni wykonują w ambulansie, autorzy niniejszego artykułu ograniczyli swoje rozważania wyłącznie do tego miejsca pracy [27][28][29]. Jak wspomniano, przyczyną rozwoju dolegliwości narządu ruchu ratowników medycznych jest zmęczenie mięśni związane z wykonywaniem różnych zabiegów medycznych w wymuszonej, nienaturalnej pozycji ciała [30][31][32].…”
Section: Wstępunclassified
“…Biorąc pod uwagę, że większość zabiegów ratownicy medyczni wykonują w ambulansie, autorzy niniejszego artykułu ograniczyli swoje rozważania wyłącznie do tego miejsca pracy [27][28][29]. Jak wspomniano, przyczyną rozwoju dolegliwości narządu ruchu ratowników medycznych jest zmęczenie mięśni związane z wykonywaniem różnych zabiegów medycznych w wymuszonej, nienaturalnej pozycji ciała [30][31][32].…”
Section: Wstępunclassified
“…The need to develop better design standards was mentioned in eight articles. Articles stated that there were "no science-based standards that governed ambulance patient compartment design and safety" (20), and that including HFE principles and research into ambulance "design, construction, and performance standard[s] would provide a baseline for improving safety, ergonomics and emergency medical care…" (21). Further, the lack of detailed standards limited compatibility between EMS services as they often had to develop their own specifications.…”
Section: General Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perhaps more importantly, this scoping review provides the scientific-basis needed to inform the development of future ambulance and EMS equipment standards. As mentioned, current standards, such as the KKK-1822F used in the US, lacked scientific-basis and considerations for safety and HFE (20,21). Integrating HFE principles and research into design standards would enable designers to meet core HFE principles during product development and reduce the need to rely on their knowledge or desire to review scientific papers in HFE.…”
Section: Study Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We used a systems engineering approach to refine their recommendations into a consistent set of requirements that could be analyzed further using a tradeoff analysis. 17 Figure 2 shows the requirements gathering and analysis process. This paper is mainly focused on the last step in the process, that is, a tradeoff analysis through modeling and simulation (M&S) analysis.…”
Section: Obtaining New Design Requirementsmentioning
confidence: 99%