8.4.1 Infusing Healthcare with Resilience

被引:0
|
作者
Nemeth, Christopher [1 ]
Cook, Richard [2 ]
机构
[1] Klein Associates Division of Applied Research Associates, Inc., 1750 Commerce Center Boulevard North, Fairborn,OH,45324, United States
[2] Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, The University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Avenue, MC4028, Chicago,IL,60637, United States
关键词
Cognitive systems - Health care - Information use;
D O I
10.1002/j.2334-5837.2010.tb01126.x
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Resilience engineering strives to build the adaptive capacity of systems that is essential to continue operations in the face of substantial challenges. The healthcare enterprise provides a compelling opportunity to consider resilience as a desirable trait of systems. Clinicians, from physicians to nurses and technicians, are a source of resilience and develop and rely on artifacts from status boards to information systems and equipment to perform cognitive work. While information technology (IT) systems have been promoted as a means to improve patient safety, current information systems and equipment systems are brittle and erode resilience instead of contributing to it. Based on a five-year study funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, we present a concept for an infusion device interface that would contribute to resilience. © 2010 The Authors.
引用
收藏
页码:1073 / 1087
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Extended Situational Awareness and Resilience in Healthcare Systems
    bin Abd Hamid, Tlarris Shah
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE, 2008, 3 (01): : 117 - 121
  • [32] Psychological interventions to foster resilience in healthcare professionals
    Kunzler, Angela M.
    Helmreich, Isabella
    Chmitorz, Andrea
    Koenig, Jochem
    Binder, Harald
    Wessa, Michele
    Lieb, Klaus
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2020, (07):
  • [33] Privacy, security and resilience in mobile healthcare applications
    Lin, Wenjun
    Xu, Ming
    He, Jingyi
    Zhang, Wenjun
    ENTERPRISE INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 2023, 17 (03)
  • [34] Burnout and moral resilience in interdisciplinary healthcare professionals
    Antonsdottir, Inga
    Rushton, Cynda Hylton
    Nelson, Katie Elizabeth
    Heinze, Katherine E.
    Swoboda, Sandra M.
    Hanson, Ginger C.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2022, 31 (1-2) : 196 - 208
  • [35] Maximising resilience resources for mental healthcare staff
    Gevaux, Nicole S.
    Petty, Stephanie
    MENTAL HEALTH REVIEW JOURNAL, 2018, 23 (01) : 37 - 53
  • [36] Psychological interventions to foster resilience in healthcare students
    Kunzler, Angela M.
    Helmreich, Isabella
    Konig, Jochem
    Chmitorz, Andrea
    Wessa, Michele
    Binder, Harald
    Lieb, Klaus
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2020, (07):
  • [37] Socio-Technical Resilience for Community Healthcare
    Bennaceur, Amel
    Stuart, Avelie
    Price, Blaine
    Bandara, Arosha
    Levine, Mark
    Clare, Linda
    Cohen, Jessica
    Mccormick, Ciaran
    Mehta, Vikram
    Bennasar, Mohamed
    Gooch, Daniel
    Gavidia-Calderon, Carlos
    Kordoni, Anastasia
    Nuseibeh, Bashar
    FIRST INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON TRUSTWORTHY AUTONOMOUS SYSTEMS, TAS 2023, 2022,
  • [38] Resilience is not control: healthcare, crisis management, and ICT
    Nemeth, Christopher
    Wears, Robert L.
    Patel, Sachin
    Rosen, Greg
    Cook, Richard
    COGNITION TECHNOLOGY & WORK, 2011, 13 (03) : 189 - 202
  • [39] Resilience of primary healthcare professionals: a systematic review
    Robertson, Helen D.
    Elliott, Alison M.
    Burton, Christopher
    Iversen, Lisa
    Murchie, Peter
    Porteous, Terry
    Matheson, Catriona
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE, 2016, 66 (647): : E423 - E433
  • [40] Resilience is not control: healthcare, crisis management, and ICT
    Christopher Nemeth
    Robert L. Wears
    Sachin Patel
    Greg Rosen
    Richard Cook
    Cognition, Technology & Work, 2011, 13