| Literature DB >> 31317870 |
Juliane Pfarr1, David W Tscholl1, Michael T Ganter2, Donat R Spahn1, Christoph B Noethiger1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Continuous patient monitoring has been described by the World Health Organization as extremely important and is widely used in anesthesia, intensive care medicine, and emergency medicine. However, current state-of-the-art number- and waveform-based monitoring does not ideally support human users in acquiring quick, confident interpretations with low cognitive effort, and there are additional problematic aspects such as alarm fatigue. We developed a visualization technology (Visual Patient), specifically designed to help caregivers gain situation awareness quickly, which presents vital sign information in the form of an animated avatar of the monitored patient. We suspected that because of the way it displays the information as large, colorful, moving graphic objects, caregivers might be able to perform patient monitoring using their peripheral vision, which may facilitate quicker detection of anomalies, independently of acoustic alarms.Entities:
Keywords: anesthesia; computers; critical care; diagnosis; patient monitoring; perception; situation awareness; vision
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31317870 PMCID: PMC6668297 DOI: 10.2196/13041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1An example of a possible future application of peripheral vision monitoring in the form of an augmented reality application for patient monitoring, as Philips (Koninklijke Philips NV, Amsterdam, Netherlands) has tested on a Google (Alphabet Inc) Glass headset. If the reader looks at the center of the operating field in this photo, they can no longer read the numerical monitoring information, for example, saturation: 88%, however, they can still see that the avatar is purple and thus desaturated.
Figure 2(A and B) Study setup: A study participant sits in front of 2 computer monitors. An eye tracker records the participant’s eye movements, which we used to confirm that the monitor on which the changes in patient condition were displayed was located in the peripheral field of view of the participant. The green funnel shows where the participant is looking and confirms that the monitor to the left remains in the peripheral visual field of the participant as long as they do not look away from the laptop screen in front. The base of the green cone corresponds to a radius of approximately 30° around the participant’s point of sharpest vision. Everything outside the funnel lies in the participant’s peripheral field of view. (C and D) The gaze plot data for 1 participant. Each point indicates a gaze fixation. A line links successive fixations.
Study and participant characteristics.
| Name of study center with number of participants. | Cantonal Hospital Winterthur (n=22) | University Hospital Zurich (n=16) | ||
| Participants included in data analysis, n (%) | 17 (77) | 13 (81) | >.99a | |
| Senior anesthesiologists, n (%) | 4 (25) | 5 (38) | .69a | |
| Resident physicians, n (%) | 4 (25) | 2 (15) | .66a | |
| Nurse anesthetists, n (%) | 8 (50) | 6 (46) | >.99a | |
| Female | 9 (56) | 8 (62) | .69a | |
| Male | 7 (44) | 5 (38) | .69a | |
| Age group of participants (years), median (IQRb) | 45-54 (25-34 to 45-54) | 25-34 (25-34 to 35-44) | ||
| Anesthesia experience group of participants (years), median (IQR) | More than 10 (5-10 to >10) | 5 to 10 (1-5 to >10) | .32c | |
| Duration of data collection (minutes), median (IQR) | 77 (70-86) | 76 (70-80) | .39c | |
| Duration of peripheral vision experiment (minutes), median (IQR) | 13.5 (12-15) | 13 (12-15) | .43c | |
aFisher exact test.
bIQR: interquartile range.
cMann-Whitney U test.
Figure 3The results enabled 30 direct intraparticipant comparisons. All except 2 participants achieved a better performance with the avatar. The number of perceived changes in the patient’s condition quadrupled in scenario 1 and more than doubled in scenario 2. Median perceived confidence: 0=very unconfident, 1=unconfident, 2=confident, and 3=very confident. Paired Student t tests showed statistical significance for all results.
| Vital sign | Scenario 1 (n=16) | Scenario 2 (n=13) | ||||
| Conventional, n (%) | Avatar, n (%) | Conventional, n (%) | Avatar, n (%) | |||
| Pulse too high | 16 (100) | 16 (100) | >.99 | 13 (100) | 12 (92) | >.99 |
| Pulse too low | 8 (50) | 0 (0) | .002 | 9 (69) | 1 (8) | <.004 |
| Blood pressure too high | 0 (0) | 16 (100) | <.001 | 1 (8) | 13 (100) | <.001 |
| Blood pressure too low | 4 (25) | 4 (25) | >.99 | 0 (0) | 6 (46) | .010 |
| Saturation too low | 10 (63) | 15 (94) | .080 | 2 (15) | 9 (69) | .020 |
| Central venous pressure too high | 2 (13) | 15 (94) | <.001 | 0 (0) | 7 (54) | .005 |
| Central venous pressure too low | 0 (0) | 10 (63) | <.001 | 1 (8) | 2 (15) | >.99 |
| ST-Segment abnormal | 4 (25) | 7 (44) | .46 | 4 (31) | 2 (21) | .64 |
| Expiratory carbon dioxide concentration too high | 4 (25) | 16 (100) | <.001 | 3 (21) | 13 (100) | <.001 |
| Expiratory carbon dioxide concentration too low | 5 (31) | 10 (63) | .16 | 2 (15) | 1 (8) | >.99 |
| Respiratory rate too high | 1 (6) | 14 (88) | <.001 | 3 (23) | 11 (85) | .005 |
| Respiratory rate too low | 2 (13) | 2 (13) | >.99 | 2 (15) | 2 (15) | >.99 |
| Tidal volume too high | 2 (13) | 15 (94) | <.001 | 1 (8) | 6 (46) | .070 |
| Tidal volume too low | 2 (13) | 2 (13) | >.99 | 1 (8) | 1 (8) | >.99 |
| Brain activity high | 2 (13) | 9 (56) | .020 | 0 (0) | 5 (38) | .040 |
| Body temperature too high | 2 (13) | 16 (100) | <.001 | 0 (0) | 12 (92) | <.001 |
| Body temperature too low | 0 (0) | 9 (56) | <.001 | 0 (0) | 7 (54) | .005 |
| Neuromuscular relaxation high | 0 (0) | 5 (31) | .040 | 0 (0) | 2 (15) | .48 |
aFisher exact test.