As a guest user you are not logged in or recognized by your IP address. You have
access to the Front Matter, Abstracts, Author Index, Subject Index and the full
text of Open Access publications.
The emerging computerized system for patient safety event reporting eases the course of learning from medical errors and adverse events for a safer healthcare environment. To a medical event like patient falls, the course usually involves pre, during and post stages for the prediction, reporting and solution of the event. However, the reporting stage often separates from the other two stages for risk assessment and cause analysis. As this iterative flow of actions falls apart and becomes unintelligible or intangible due to information gaps, it is dubious for users to join and complete the task at all three stages in a high quality. Therefore, in this paper, by referencing studies in aspects of Norman' s task action theory and fall management programs, we proposed a gap-bridging model to describe the process of assisting users in proceeding along the stages by user-centered design approaches. Based upon the model, we also developed a series of interface artifacts served as gap-bridging features, which hold promise in improving the quality of reporting and reporter engagement of the system.
This website uses cookies
We use cookies to provide you with the best possible experience. They also allow us to analyze user behavior in order to constantly improve the website for you. Info about the privacy policy of IOS Press.
This website uses cookies
We use cookies to provide you with the best possible experience. They also allow us to analyze user behavior in order to constantly improve the website for you. Info about the privacy policy of IOS Press.