Training Health Care Professionals to Deal with an Explosion of Electronic Distraction
The literature on widespread adoption of mobile devices comes largely from news stories and market research reports, with recent estimates of smartphone technology use by clinicians ranging from 72–94 % [1, 2]. Based on the explosion of literature and data on the ever-growing number of distracted dr...
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description | The literature on widespread adoption of mobile devices comes largely from news stories and market research reports, with recent estimates of smartphone technology use by clinicians ranging from 72–94 % [1, 2]. Based on the explosion of literature and data on the ever-growing number of distracted driving, distracted flying and the decrease in worker productivity is not a surprise that electronic distraction would start to be noted in health care. Safety Factors Human errors rather than technology flaws were the cause of most technology-associated medication errors reported at a large Illinois hospital [5]. Phillips J, Bachenheimer B, Kutza C. An analysis of medication errors associated with technology. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s12028-012-9809-7 |
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subjects | Attention Cell Phone Computers, Handheld Critical Care - methods Critical Care Medicine Education Electronic Health Records Health Personnel - education Humans Intensive Internal Medicine Medical errors Medicine Medicine & Public Health Neurology Opinions and Arguments Patient Safety Richtel, Matt Smartphones |
title | Training Health Care Professionals to Deal with an Explosion of Electronic Distraction |
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