圆桌讨论:熟练使用复杂的卫生技术需要多方面的培训方法。

Joseph Sheffer, Gerard Castro, Genoveffa Devers, J. Stifter, Rachel R Vitoux
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们拉什大学医学中心正在进行一项大型复杂的技术改造。因此,我今天的许多发言可能多少受到我们目前的经验的影响。我想说的是,与复杂技术相关的卫生专业人员经历了大量的认知负担。当你更换设备并可能转向另一家供应商时,或者有时甚至当你升级同一家供应商的型号时,我认为你不能假设旧设备和新设备将是“苹果对苹果”。例如,如果我使用一张床,我从一个供应商的床到另一个供应商的床,机械工作的方式将是不一样的,通过电子病历(EMR)报告的能力也可能是不一样的。这不是一个同类竞争的机会。有一个与员工使用复杂技术相关的学习阶段,但在某些情况下,也有一个忘记阶段。那是因为,比如说,我过去一直在使用某种呼吸机,我知道如何设置刻度盘和闹钟。当我得到一个新的呼吸机时,可能是从另一家公司,我将不得不忘记我用旧呼吸机所做的事情,现在重新学习如何使用新技术。导致认知负担的另一个问题是医疗保健的压力,要确保安全,并确保我们的结果是高质量的。所以,当你使用复杂的技术时,如果你不恰当或不安全地使用这项技术,你就有可能伤害到别人,这也是一个很大的负担,因为你要真正努力确保你明白你在做什么,并正确使用这项技术。就技术的熟练程度而言,这是另一个有趣的问题,我们一直在努力解决这个问题,因为我们目前在Rush的技术上线。我们花了很多时间与其他组织的用户讨论我们的团队在使用这项新技术时遇到的一些困难,并在这些其他组织中发现了类似的问题。随着时间的推移,我们已经有了一种感觉,人们几乎已经接受了这样一种观点,即人们在管理这个设备方面将是熟练的,而不是专业的用户——这项技术的使用不一定会达到最高的质量或安全水平。再次以呼吸机为例:熟练程度是否能够识别按钮及其作用?或者,我们是否为员工设定了更高的效率和效益标准?如果员工达不到这个标准怎么办?如果我有一个工作人员,他可能会创造一个解决方案,使一件设备更有效率或更有效?这证明了定义熟练程度是多么困难,特别是当您看到我们正在使用的一些技术并不总是满足工作人员需要处理的过程时。因此,当设备运来的时候,我们会教他们基础知识,并在基础知识上验证他们的能力。然而,要达到一个超越熟练的水平——达到更高的效率或专业水平——有时需要增加圆桌会议参与者
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Roundtable Discussion: Gaining Proficiency in the Use of Complex Health Technology Requires a Multifaceted Training Approach.
Janet Stifter We are going through a large, complex technology changeover at Rush University Medical Center. Therefore, many of my remarks today may be somewhat colored by the experience we are having currently. I would say that there is a great deal of cognitive burden experienced by health professionals related to complex technology. When you are changing out devices and potentially going to another vendor, or sometimes even when you're upgrading a model with the same vendor, I don't think you can assume that the old and new devices will be “apples to apples.” For example, if I'm working with a bed, and I go from a bed from one vendor to a bed from another vendor, the way the mechanics work is not going to be the same and the capability in terms of reporting that's going to come through your electronic medical record (EMR) is also potentially not going to be the same. It's not an apples-to-apples kind of opportunity. There's a learning phase related to staff use of complex technology, but in some instances, there is also an unlearning phase. That's because I've been working, for example, with a certain ventilator in the past, and I know how to set the dials and the alarms. When I get a new ventilator, potentially from another company, I will have to unlearn what I was doing with the old ventilator and now relearn how to use the new piece of technology. The other concern leading to cognitive burden is the pressure in healthcare to be safe and to ensure high quality in terms of our outcomes. So, when you're working with complex technology, and you have the potential to harm somebody if you are not using that technology appropriately or safely, that's also a big burden in terms of really trying to make sure that you understand what you are doing and use the technology appropriately. In terms of what amount of proficiency is reasonable to expect when onboarding technology, that is another interesting issue that we have been grappling with as part of our current technology go-live at Rush. We have spent a lot of time talking to users at other organizations about some of the difficulties our team has been experiencing with use of this new technology and have found similar concerns at some of these other organizations. Over time, we've gotten the sense that there has been almost an acceptance that people will be proficient but not expert users in terms of being able to manage this device—that the use of this technology is not necessarily going to reach the highest levels of quality or safety. Again using the example of a ventilator: Is proficiency being able to identify the buttons and what they do? Or, do we set a higher standard related to efficiency and effectiveness for staff? What if staff is not able to reach that standard? What if I have a staff member who is potentially creating a workaround to make a piece of equipment more efficient or effective? This demonstrates how difficult it is to define proficiency, especially when you're looking at the fact that some of the technology we are working with is not always meeting the processes that the staff member needs to address. Therefore, we teach them the basics when the equipment comes in, and we competency validate them on the basics. However, to then reach a level beyond proficiency—to higher levels of efficiency or expertise—sometimes that requires addiRoundtable Participants
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来源期刊
Biomedical Instrumentation and Technology
Biomedical Instrumentation and Technology Computer Science-Computer Networks and Communications
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: AAMI publishes Biomedical Instrumentation & Technology (BI&T) a bi-monthly peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the developers, managers, and users of medical instrumentation and technology.
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