| Literature DB >> 30884250 |
Frank A Drews1, Lindsay C Visnovsky1, Jeanmarie Mayer1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This article provides a review of areas that present significant challenges in infection prevention and control and describes human factors engineering (HFE) approaches that have been applied successfully to these areas. In addition, implications and recommendations for HFE use in future research are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: adherence engineering; bloodstream infections; hand hygiene; infection prevention and control; personal protective equipment
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30884250 PMCID: PMC7207010 DOI: 10.1177/0018720819833214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Factors ISSN: 0018-7208 Impact factor: 2.888
Adherence Engineering Principles, Goals, and Kit Implementation Examples
| Principle | Goal | Implementation |
|---|---|---|
| Affordances | Make use intuitive | Tabs to open kit, visibility of flaps of pockets |
| Task intrinsic guidance | Provide structure/preview of task sequence | Sequential order of pockets, when multiple items then added information about sequence of use |
| Nudging | Support adherence by suggesting desirable actions | Providing hand gel in pockets, providing pen to remind to date the dressing |
| Smart defaults | Help select desirable actions/ material | Selection of contents that follow best practices |
| Feedback | Facilitate resumption and performance assessment | Pockets are visibly empty after step completion supporting resumption |
| Minimizing cognitive effort | Support task execution by reducing cognitive demand | Chunking of related activities, icons, and labels as reminders, structured sequence, reduction in planning needs for procedure |
| Minimizing physical effort | Make adherence convenient | Reduction of walking requirements (e.g., to hand gel dispenser, to supplies room to pick up missing items) |
Research Topics, Contributions, and Implications of HFE Research in Infection Prevention and Control
| Topic | Contribution (Area) | Implications | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hand hygiene | Identification of relationship between spatial layout and HH adherence (7) | Optimization of dispenser visibility and location |
|
| Importance of mental models for task performance (2) | Analysis and design of tasks to address user mental models |
| |
| PPE | Design of PPE carts (4) | Optimization of equipment |
|
| Categorization of PPE breakdowns using HFE framework (1) | Importance of HFE frameworks to analyze performance failures |
| |
| Development of PPE training (6) | Importance of systematic training development |
| |
| Identification of communication issues. Spatial layout affected adherence; lack of demarcation lines contributed to HCP confusion (6)(7) | Spatial layout and communication improve performance |
| |
| Central lines | Development and evaluation of Michigan Keystone Project, reducing CLABSI (4)(7)(8) | Importance of individual, team and organizational factors; develop and provide standardized equipment (carts) |
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| Development and evaluation of maintenance kit to improve procedural adherence and reduce CLABSI (1)(3)(4) | Development and application of HFE framework to kit design, development, and evaluation |
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Note. HH = hand hygiene; PPE = personal protective equipment; HFE = human factors engineering; HCP = health care professional; CLABSI = central line associated bloodstream infection.