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Towards Dynamic Checklists: Understanding Contexts of Use and Deriving Requirements for Context-Driven Adaptation
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Towards Dynamic Checklists: Understanding Contexts of Use and Deriving Requirements for Context-Driven Adaptation

Leah Kulp, Aleksandra Sarcevic, Megan Cheng and Randall S. Burd
ACM transactions on computer-human interaction, v 28(2), pp 1-33
01 Apr 2021

Abstract

Computer Science Computer Science, Cybernetics Computer Science, Information Systems Science & Technology Technology
The goal of this in-the-wild study was to understand how different patient, provider, and environment contexts affected the use of a tablet-based checklist in a dynamic medical setting. Fifteen team leaders used the digital checklist in 187 actual trauma resuscitations. The measures of checklist interactions included the number of unchecked items and the number of notes written on the checklist. Of the 10 contexts we studied, team leaders' arrival after the patient and patients with penetrating injuries were both associated with more unchecked items. We also found that the care of patients with external injuries contributed to more notes written on the checklist. Finally, our results showed that more experienced leaders took significantly more notes overall and more numerical notes than less experienced leaders. We conclude by discussing design implications and steps that can be achieved with context-aware computing towards adaptive checklists that meet the needs of dynamic use contexts.

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5 citations in Scopus

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Computer Science, Cybernetics
Computer Science, Information Systems
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