Transcript Intro

The Common User
Interface Project
Paul Frosdick, Senior Clinical
Pharmacist, National Programme
for Information Technology
Apologies
Mike Bainbridge
Outline
• Introduction
– Objectives and context
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Why a CUI
Guiding principles
Defining the CUI
Possible deliverables
Questions.
Outline
• Introduction
– Objectives and context
•
•
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Why a CUI
Guiding principles
Defining the CUI
Possible deliverables
Questions.
Objectives and Context
To deliver a 21st century health service through
efficient use of information technology
Modernisation of the NHS:
•10 year programme initiated July
2000
•Access / Choice
•Health outcomes
•Efficiency
•Societal changes and demands
•IT an underpinning enabler for the
modernisation programme.
Objectives and Context
•Moving from a largely paper based NHS
•Information to be available electronically
anywhere in England
•Balance between nationally available
information and local application
•Remove duplication of records and effort
•Improve accuracy of records and treatment.
Providing ‘Safe Joined up’ care
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Increased mobility of ‘service users’
Increasing needs of care
Ageing population
Safety in practice across boundaries
Safety in transfer of care
Safety of clinical systems themselves
Providing Better Care.
Changes in focus
• Patient centred
– Involving in decisions
– Reducing paternalism
• Clarity of purpose
– Systems
– Behaviour
• Professional
• Systems
• Safety built in to all systems as standard
• Risk assessment of the systems and
implementation
• Providing appropriate interfaces to
information.
The Five NPfIT Clusters
(NPfIT’s geographic
grouping of Strategic Health
Authorities in England)
Outline
• Introduction
– Objectives and context
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Why a CUI
Guiding principles
Defining the CUI
Possible deliverables
Questions.
Common user interface ?
• Patient safety – recurring theme
• Maximise uptake
• Education and training
– Not minimised
– Effectively targeted and delivered.
Or another example
• Date format for display
– 09-11-2004 - UK
– 11-09-2004 – US
– 11-NOV-2004 – Safe !
• Separator
– / \ . or <SPACE> for display or data
input ?
– Data storage is nothing to do with it.
‘Mother who died after junior
doctor’s blunder;
Tragedy highlights lack of support
for inexperienced staff’
Daily Mail
Wednesday, February 4 2003
‘The Consultant Gynaecologist
highlighted the widespread
problem of junior staff being left
to work unsupported in unfamiliar
hospital departments’
The doctor had been working in the department
‘for only ten days’
Outline
• Introduction
– Objectives and context
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Why a CUI
Guiding principles
Defining the CUI
Possible deliverables
Questions.
Standards
(ISB)
Integrated into the fabric
Knowledge
Common
UI project
NPSA
Edu &
Training
The Service
(NHS)
Assurance
ISVs
LSPs
Clinician Engagement Group
and NPfIT Technology Office
Only achieved with:
• 1 terminology - SNOMED CT
• 1 terminology server – Health Language
• 1 drug database – dm+d - UK SNOMED
extensions
• 1 drug decision support – First Data Bank
Europe
• 1 Decision support framework – Map of
Medicine
• 1 Knowledge source - National Electronic
Library for Health
• All backed by a standards board
• No exceptions !
• Why not the interface ?
Guiding Principles
• A vision and a journey
– There are no quick fixes
• Clinical excellence meets industry
excellence
• User-centred design approach
– Users involved in design, users don’t
do the design
• Define once, re-use everywhere
The NHS UI
Clinical Applications
Information and Knowledge Resources
Non-Clinical Applications – email, word processing etc
The Vision
• Enable the delivery of a consistent user
experience across applications and devices,
that
– Is useful, usable and compelling to clinicians, thus
encouraging increased adoption of technology in all
care settings
– Increases patient safety
– Reduces the cost of adopting NPfIT systems, in
terms of end user training and support costs
– Increases the productivity and effectiveness of
clinicians, enabling the process changes required to
achieve the EWTD and service modernisation goals.
Outline
• Introduction
– Objectives and context
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•
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•
•
Why a CUI
Guiding principles
Defining the CUI
Possible deliverables
Questions.
The Journey
• Definition of “the NHS UI”
• Delivery of the NHS UI Design Guide
– Generic guidelines through to detailed UI
layouts for specific areas
– Publish as NPfIT Standard
– Available to all NHS software suppliers
• Develop toolkit of UI components
– Easier & quicker for application developers
to conform to Design Guide
• Adoption by software application
developers.
Defining the NHS User
Interface
• Iterative approach, starting with
observations and interviews with real
users doing real work
• Draft designs
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Paper wireframes
On-screen prototypes
User walkthroughs at each stage
Stakeholder reviews at each stage
Design
• NPSA, NPfIT, NICE, clinical leads
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Iterate designs based on feedback
Further usability evaluations
Document in Design Guide
Review, sign off and issue as NPfIT
Standard.
Prototype
Evaluate
Outline
• Introduction
– Objectives and context
•
•
•
•
•
Why a CUI
Guiding principles
Defining the CUI
Possible deliverables
Questions.
Draft Focus Areas for
Design Guide and Toolkit
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Prescribing
Decision support
Test requests & results
Alerts & notifications
Find / identify patient
Patient record – view and add new
Care pathways
Discharge.
Sample Components
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Patient banner
Medication selector
Test selector
Test results viewer
– Tabular vs. graphs
• Lists
– Patients, medications, tests, etc
• Scheduler
– Medication administration, tests/exams etc
• Alerts/warnings.
Other Design Guide Topics
• Possible topics:
– General design principles for health
UIs
– Navigation and task flow design
– Standard information display formats
• E.g. dates, patient name, address, etc
– Designing for accessibility
– Writing alerts and error messages
– Help & other user assistance.
Using RSS to keep up to date…
NeLH knowledge search
Any Questions?