Jeff Belden introduces his book: Inspired EHRs: "Designing for Clinicians" designed for vendor developer teams wanting to improve their user experience.
5. Inspired EHRs: Designing for Clinicians is a
free, online, interactive e-book for vendor developer
teams wanting to improve their user experience. It
offers clinically inspired, generously illustrated,
inspirational examples to work from.
6. Inspired EHRs: Designing for Clinicians is a
free, online, interactive e-book for vendor developer
teams wanting to improve their user experience. It
offers clinically inspired, generously illustrated,
inspirational examples to work from.
…free, online…
7. Inspired EHRs: Designing for Clinicians is a
free, online, interactive e-book for vendor developer
teams wanting to improve their user experience. It
offers clinically inspired, generously illustrated,
inspirational examples to work from.
…interactive eBook…
8. Inspired EHRs: Designing for Clinicians is a
free, online, interactive e-book for vendor developer
teams wanting to improve their user experience. It
offers clinically inspired, generously illustrated,
inspirational examples to work from.
…vendor developer teams…
9. Inspired EHRs: Designing for Clinicians is a
free, online, interactive e-book for vendor developer
teams wanting to improve their user experience. It
offers clinically inspired, generously illustrated,
inspirational examples to work from.
…who want to improve UX…
10. Inspired EHRs: Designing for Clinicians is a
free, online, interactive e-book for vendor developer
teams wanting to improve their user experience. It
offers clinically inspired, generously illustrated,
inspirational examples to work from.
…clinically inspired…
11. Inspired EHRs: Designing for Clinicians is a
free, online, interactive e-book for vendor developer
teams wanting to improve their user experience. It
offers clinically inspired, generously illustrated,
inspirational examples to work from.
…generously illustrated…
12. Inspired EHRs: Designing for Clinicians is a
free, online, interactive e-book for vendor developer
teams wanting to improve their user experience. It
offers clinically inspired, generously illustrated,
inspirational examples to work from.
…inspirational examples…
53. Invest
More chapters
• Problem List
• Lab Trends Display
• Dashboards
• Clinical Decision Support
• and more…
Contact me at
feedback@inspiredEHRs.org
54. Thanks
Funding sponsors
California HealthCare Foundation
SHARP-C project of ONC
In-kind sponsorship
EHRA Clinician Experience Workgroup
EHRA Board
Participating vendors at design workshops
56. Questions
Contact us
University of Missouri-Columbia Jeff Belden
Richelle Koopman
Joi Moore
Nathan Lowrance
Involution Studios Juhan Sonin
Jen Patel
Shreeya Gangwal
University of Maryland Catherine Plaisant
University of Texas-Houston Todd Johnson
feedback@inspiredEHRs.org toomanyclicks.com
Editor's Notes
-> The product
-> The process
Let’s imagine a story.
You are a patient (or with parent) w several chronic diseases.
• Your medication list is not simple.
• The data drives decisions that you and your doctor or other provider make together.
• We all need to be on the same page.
• New symptoms could be side effects
◦ When did symptoms begin?
◦ What medications were recently changed? Details?
Let’s take a look. Open the Med List chapter.
Jump to 2.2, The Interactive Table.
- Note across the top. The Med List chapter has 3 sections, and a summary.
Before we jump to the Interactive Table, you should know that EHR Med Lists can be painfully awkward.
We thought we could do better.
— Go to Med list chapter. Jump to Section 2.2 on The Interactive Table. —
Here's one of the prototypes. (2.2 The Interactive Table)
• Isn't it great? I love these mini-timelines. I was delighted and surprised one morning to see these. Thanks to the design team!
• And this is a powerful tool for finding answers
◦ What is recent? Sort date
◦ Which drugs cause dizziness? Filter
◦ Which drugs may need refills today? Only ones from Dr Barnes. (sort, then filter)
◦ And these tools would work for patients, too. (Big sister, little sister)
Take a look at the mini-timelines again,
• The mini-timelines are enough to have the big picture without all the detail.
◦ Sometimes, we just need to know if we're in Kansas or Missouri.
◦ Other times you need more detail – is the upcoming third intersection a left or right-hand exit ramp?
• Let’s take a look at the full-size timeline.
Go to Timeline
• See doses, gaps, dose change timing with more granularity
• Time travel (expand range, move backwards to ‘shorter list’.)
What principles drove the design?
Let’s take a look.
Go to Med List Chapter, section 2.2 [show journey from text, to inline deeper dive, to jump to HF chapter]
What principles drove the design?
User empathy and research
We list the physician’s tasks. We illustrate cognitive load. We account for the fact that humans have limited working memory
We invite you to read more, if you have time and interest.
For example, let’s explore working memory.
Click through to Working Memory in HF chapter.