| Literature DB >> 36050329 |
Joanna C Yau1, Benjamin Girault2, Tiantian Feng2, Karel Mundnich2, Amrutha Nadarajan2, Brandon M Booth2, Emilio Ferrara3, Kristina Lerman3, Eric Hsieh4, Shrikanth Narayanan2,3.
Abstract
The TILES-2019 data set consists of behavioral and physiological data gathered from 57 medical residents (i.e., trainees) working in an intensive care unit (ICU) in the United States. The data set allows for the exploration of longitudinal changes in well-being, teamwork, and job performance in a demanding environment, as residents worked in the ICU for three weeks. Residents wore a Fitbit, a Bluetooth-based proximity sensor, and an audio-feature recorder. They completed daily surveys and interviews at the beginning and end of their rotation. In addition, we collected data from environmental sensors (i.e., Internet-of-Things Bluetooth data hubs) and obtained hospital records (e.g., patient census) and residents' job evaluations. This data set may be may be of interest to researchers interested in workplace stress, group dynamics, social support, the physical and psychological effects of witnessing patient deaths, predicting survey data from sensors, and privacy-aware and privacy-preserving machine learning. Notably, a small subset of the data was collected during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36050329 PMCID: PMC9436730 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-022-01636-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 8.501
Day shift schedule. This table describes residents’ general schedule.
| Start time | End time | Activity |
|---|---|---|
| 6:30 AM | 8:30 AM | Sign-out, Pre-rounds, and Fellow Rounds |
| 8:30 AM | 10:00 AM | Work Rounds |
| 10:00 AM | 12:00 PM | Attending Bedside Rounds |
| 12:00 PM | 1:00 PM | Lunch/Conference (Grand Rounds, M&M, CPC) |
| 1:00 PM | 5:30 PM | Patient Care and Management/Afternoon Didactics |
| 5:30 PM | 6:00 PM | Sign-out to Night Float resident |
Note that schedules varied and occasionally residents began working in the ICU later or left earlier due to professional activities.
Selected sensors with a summary of measures (output) and instructed use or sensing times.
| Sensor | Measures | Instructed use/Sensing times |
|---|---|---|
| Fitbit Charge 3 | PPG-based heart rate, step count, sleep | 24 h/day |
| RescueTime | Cell phone usage | 24 h/day |
| Unihertz Atom | Audio features, received signal strength of Bluetooth packets | At work |
| TILES app | Midday, end of day, end of week surveys | Upon request (push event) |
| Web browser | Baseline survey | At the beginning of the study |
| Owl-in-One | Received signal strength of Bluetooth packets | Installed at LAC + USC Hospital, 24 h/day |
| Eddystone Beacon | Eddystone Beacon | Installed at LAC + USC Hospital, 24 h/day |
| TIS Device | Interactions | At work |
The first two sensing streams were obtained directly from participants through wearable sensors while apps were installed on personal smartphones. All surveys were obtained by direct input of participants on their personal smartphones or a web browser. Owl-in-One and Eddystone beacons sensing streams were obtained by placing sensors in key locations of the ICU. The TIS device streams were obtained by placing a contact tracing sensor on the participants’ work badge. PPG: photoplethysmography.
Attending and peer evaluation items.
| Evaluator | Item | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Attending | Patient Care and Procedural Skills | Gathers and synthesizes essential and accurate information to define each patient’s clinical problems and to develop comprehensive management plan for each patient |
| Medical Knowledge | Clinical knowledge: knowledge of diagnostic tests and procedures | |
| System-Based Practices | Works effectively with an inter-professional team (e.g., peers, consultants, nursing, ancillary professionals and other support personnel) and recognizes system error to advocate for system improvement | |
| Practice-Based Learning and Improvement | Receptive to constructive criticism | |
| Professionalism | Accepts responsibility and follows through on tasks | |
| Interpersonal and Communication Skills | Has professional interactions and communicates effectively with patients, caregivers, and members of the inter-professional teams | |
| Peer | Interpersonal and Communication Skills 1 | Effective communication with families, patients, and all members of the health care team (nursing, peers, faculty, and other services) |
| Interpersonal and Communication Skills 2 | Teaching/willingness, ability, provides opportunities to learn/teach | |
| Interpersonal and Communication Skills 3 | Supervision for patient care, during procedures, during work rounds | |
| Patient Care and Procedural Skills | Effectiveness and completeness of sign-outs. Information is correct and “call” plan is clearly identified | |
| Professionalism 1 | Helpfulness in the completion of tasks and shares equally in the team’s work | |
| Professionalism 2 | Coverage of cross-cover issues and completion of necessary tasks when on call | |
| Professionalism 3 | Level of integrity, honesty, citizenship, trustworthiness, and reliability |
Fig. 1Number of residents enrolled over weeks of the study.
Incentives structure: Compensation.
| Kind | Minimum # points/Rank | Prize |
|---|---|---|
| Enrollment | Enrollment session | $50 |
| Baseline survey | $50 | |
| Offboarding session | $15 | |
| Weekly | 200 | $25 |
| 150 | $20 | |
| 100 | $15 | |
| 75 | $10 | |
| Ranking | 1st | $150 |
| 2nd | $100 | |
| 3rd | $75 |
Weekly points awarded for compliance were translated into monetary rewards.
Incentives structure: Points.
| Kind | Action | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Enrollment | Download and install the TILES app | 50 |
| Authorize Fitbit access | 50 | |
| Weekly Base | Open the TILES app | 5 |
| Complete end of day/week survey | 8 | |
| Complete midday survey | 2 | |
| Wear and sync Fitbit | 10 | |
| Weekly Bonuses | Multiplier for 3 + consecutive days of Fitbit data | × 2 |
| Reach at least 205 weekly points | 20 | |
| Earn more points than the previous week | 20 | |
| Wear and sync Atom phone for at least 2 days | 20 |
Participants received weekly points by wearing sensors and answering surveys. These were converted to weekly monetary rewards and end-of-study bonuses (see Table 5 for the prizes).
Fig. 2Data flow. This diagram shows the data flow from the wearable and environmental sensors to the research server. The research server denotes a set of AWS services that we collectively call the research server. Data is processed through these services before being stored in AWS S3 for mid-term use.
TILES-2019 Main Data Record.
| Folders | Subfolders | Subsubfolders | Description | File Split |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| fitbit | daily-summary | Daily summary (aggregates, sleep) | Per participant | |
| heart-rate | Heart rate (PPG) | Per participant | ||
| sleep-data | Sleep stages time series | Per participant | ||
| sleep-metadata | Sleep periods metadata | Per participant | ||
| step-count | Step count | Per participant | ||
| metadata | participant-info | IDs, work information | Single file | |
| atomproximity | tis | tis | RSSIs to each participant with TIS sensor | Single file per participant |
| rssi | ||||
| eddystone | locations | Locations within the units RSSIs to each Atom | Single file per participant | |
| rssi | ||||
| owls | locations | Locations within the units RSSIs between Atoms | Single file per participant | |
| rssi | ||||
| owl-in-one | locations | Locations within the hospital RSSIs between Owl-in-Ones | Per participant | |
| rssi | ||||
| rescuetime | Personal phone usage (screen on times) | Per participant | ||
| surveys | raw | baseline | Demographics | Single file |
| EMA | De-identified context questions | Single file | ||
| scored | baseline | Scored answers | Single file | |
| EMA | Scored answers | Single file |
There are five main folders containing information for each stream of data plus a sixth folder containing participant metadata (all presented in alphabetical order). The details of each data stream (including measurements and features) are included in each of the subfolders of the data record as README files.
Sensor usage and compliance rates.
| Sensor | Participant opt-in | Total hours | Compliance rate | Definition of compliance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fitbit | 51/57 (89%) | 21,583 | 71% | Average fraction of days per participant with >12 hours of data |
| Atom | 45 /57 (79%) | 4,756 | 52% | Average fraction of work days (6 days per week) per participant with >4 hours of data |
| RescueTime | 48/57 (84%) | — | — | Compliance cannot be estimated due to sampling scheme† |
Compliance is computed as the presence of data exceeding half of the measurement period per day among the participants that opted in for each sensor. †RescueTime data only shows the times when phone interaction occurs, thus it is not possible to differentiate between periods with no interaction and the application not working.
Wearable sensor compliance per 1-week intervals.
| Sensor | Weeks | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | ||
| 72.4% | 72.5% | 62.0% | 0.121 | |
| 61.5% | 52.8% | 49.3% | 0.256 | |
The compliance rate for each participant was the percentage of days where data was available for at least half of the measurement period (Fitbit: 12 hours; Atom: 6 hours). The p-value column lists the significance test result after running a Kruskal-Wallis test of the difference in sensor compliance between weeks 1 and 3. The presented p-value does not suggest a significant decreasing trend in sensor compliance rate over time.
Fitbit and Atom sensor usage.
| Sensor | Usage | # of recordings | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fitbit | [8, 24) hours | 884 | 82.5 |
| [4, 8) hours | 17 | 1.6 | |
| [0, 4) hours | 170 | 15.8 | |
| Atom | [4, 12) hours | 418 | 87.3 |
| [2, 4) hours | 22 | 4.6 | |
| [0, 2) hours | 39 | 8.1 |
This table shows the number of recordings according to their length. Each recording corresponds to one day of data.
Internal consistency for the baseline survey.
| Scale | Internal Consistency | α Baseline |
|---|---|---|
| Perceived Stress (PSS)[ | 0.84 ≤ α ≤ 0.86 | 0.88 |
| Burnout (OBI)[ | ||
| Disengagement | 0.79 | 0.81 |
| Exhaustion | 0.74 | 0.75 |
| Affect (PANAS)[ | ||
| Positive Affect | 0.86 ≤ α ≤ 0.90 | 0.92 |
| Negative Affect | 0.84 ≤ α ≤ 0.87 | 0.85 |
| Depression (PHQ-9)[ | 0.86 ≤ α ≤ 0.89 | 0.86 |
| Trait Anxiety (STAI-T)[ | 0.86 ≤ α ≤ 0.95 | 0.93 |
| Sleep (MOS)[ | ||
| Sleep Disturbance | 0.80 ≤ α ≤ 0.82 | 0.69 |
| Sleep Adequacy | 0.76 ≤ α ≤ 0.82 | 0.82 |
| Sleep Somnolence | 0.63 ≤ α ≤ 0.73 | 0.53 |
| Sleep Problems (9-item version) | 0.78 ≤ α ≤ 0.83 | 0.71 |
| Personality (BFI-2)[ | ||
| Extraversion | 0.88 | 0.90 |
| Agreeableness | 0.83 ≤ α ≤ 0.85 | 0.73 |
| Conscientiousness | 0.86 ≤ α ≤ 0.88 | 0.84 |
| Negative Emotionality | 0.90 | 0.92 |
| Open-Mindedness | 0.84 ≤ α ≤ 0.85 | 0.74 |
| Social Support (MSPSS)[ | ||
| Family | 0.87 | 0.86 |
| Friends | 0.85 | 0.90 |
| Significant Other | 0.91 | 0.98 |
| Intragroup Conflict[ | ||
| Relationship Conflict | 0.92 | 0.91 |
| Task Conflict | 0.87 | 0.92 |
| Challenge and Hindrance Stressors[ | ||
| Challenge | 0.92 | 0.90 |
| Hindrance | 0.83 | 0.80 |
Internal consistency was determined using cronbach’s α and was not applicable for the IPAQ scale, HAU scale, GATS, and single-item scales on the MOS.
Survey participation and compliance rates.
| Survey | Kind | Opt-in | Compliance rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| (% and | ( % and | ||
| EMAs | Midday | 95% (54) | 77.2% (866) |
| End of Day | 95% (54) | 69.7% (780) | |
| End of Week | 81% (46) | 77.2% (105) |
Opt-in rate is the percentage of participants that responded to a certain survey type. Compliance is measured as the percentage of completed surveys.
| Measurement(s) | Stress • Burnout • Affect • Depression • Sleep • Physical Activity Measurement • Alcohol Use History • Frequency Any Tobacco Use • Personality • Social Support • Intragroup Conflict • Challenge and Hindrance Stressors • Demographics • Context and Atypical Events • Daily Stressors • Most Stressful Event • Work Context • Job Performance • Job Satisfaction • Stressors at Work • Charting at Home • Coworker Trust • Social Networks at Work • Socialization Outside of Work • Use of Wellness Resources • Heart Rate • Step Count • Acoustic Features • Team Interactions • Proximity to Key Objects • Cell Phone Use • Hospital Contextual Data • Coping with Stress • Productivity at Work • Pride at Work • Teamwork • Support System |
| Technology Type(s) | Perceived Stress Scale - 14 Questionnaire • Survey • Patient Health Questionnaire - 9 Item • Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index • FitBit • International Physical Activity Questionnaire (August 2002) Short Last 7 Days Self-Administered Format • Unihertz Atom Phone • Minew E8- TILES Interaction Sensors • Minew E8- Eddystone Beach • Rescuetime • Evaluations • Patient Census • Interview |
| Sample Characteristic - Organism | Homo sapiens |
| Sample Characteristic - Location | Los Angeles County and University of Southern California Medical Center |