Workshop on
Human Error and Clinical Systems
15-17th April 1999, The Senate Room, University of Glasgow.
http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~johnson/HECS.html
Programme:
Wednesday 14th April
17:00-19:30
Welcome reception
Department of Computing Science, University of Glasgow.
Thursday 15th April
09.30-10.00
Introduction, Chris Johnson.
10.00-11.00
Keynote: The "Why" of Error in Clinical Systems
Marilyn Sue Bogner, Institute for the Study of Medical Error,
Bethesda, USA.
11.00-11.30
Coffee
11.30-13.00
Session 1: Improving Medical Incident Reporting
Chair: Tjerk van der Schaaf,
Safety Management Group, Technical Univ. of Eindhoven.
Critical Incident Reporting in Anaesthesiology in Switzerland Using
Standard Internet Technology
S. Staender, M. Kaufman and D. Scheidegger, Dept. of Anaesthesia,
Univ. of Basel.
Risk Oriented Data Capture: Staged Modelling and Sample Solutions
with Data Overload in Clinical Settings
J. Arthur and H. Wynn, The Risk Initiative, Warwick University.
Towards the Identification of Prototypical Risk Situations in
Anaesthesia
A.S. Nyssen, Psychologie du Travail, Universite de Liege.
13.00-14.30
Lunch
14:30-15:30
Paper Session 2: Interface Design and Evaluation
Chair: Martin Gardner, University of Glasgow.
Improving the User Interface to Increase Patient Throughput
A. Gupta, J. Masthoff and P. Zwart,
Philips Research Laboratories, Redhill.
Philips Medical Systems, Brest, Netherlands.
Problems Caused by Human Error in the Operation of a Clinical
Data Collection System
Barbara McManus, Department of Health Informatics,
Univ. of Central Lancashire.
15.30-16:00
Tea
16:00-17:00
Paper Session 3: Diagnosis and Treatment Support Tools
Chair: John Gosbee, Applied Medical Informatics,
Michigan State University.
Safety and Computer Aided Design of Chemotherapy Plans
P. Hammond, S. Modgil and J.C. Wyatt,
Department of Informatics, Eastman Dental Health Institute and
Health Knowledge Management Centre, University College London.
Computer-Aided Mammography: A Case Study of Error Managment in a
Skilled Decision Making Task
M. Hartswood and R. Procter,
Inst. of Communicating and Collaborating Systems, Edinburgh University.
Friday, 16th April
09.30-10.30
Session 4: Longitudinal Studies
Chair: Tjerk van der Schaaf, Safety Management Group,
Technical Univ. of Eindhoven
Ten Years of a Medical Incident Reporting System (provisional title)
David Wright, Intensive Therapy Unit,
Western General Hospital, Edinburgh.
Identification & Analysis of Incidents in Complex, Medical Environments
Daniela Busse and Chris Johnson, Dept. of Computing Science,
Univ. of Glasgow.
10.30-11.00
Coffee
11.00-12.30
Session 5: Learning from Medical Risk Analysis
Chair: Daniela Busse, University of Glasgow
Moving from Industry/Transportation to the Medical Domain
Tjerk van der Schaaf, Safety Management Group,
Technical Univ. of Eindhoven.
Application of a System Model to Obstetric and Neonatal Audit
J. Davies, Foothills Medical Centre, University of Calgary.
Teaching about Error in Health Care
John Gosbee, Centre for Applied Medical Informatics,
Michigan State University.
12.30-14.00
Lunch
14:30-15:30
Session 6: Ethnography and Workplace Studies
Chair: Anne-Sophie Nyssen, Psychologie du Travail, Universite de Liege
Fragmentation in Care and the Potential for Human Error
A. Shepherd and O. Kostopoulou,
Cognitive and Ergonomics Research Group, Loughborough University.
Human Error in the Context of Work Activity Systems
M. Harris, A.P. Jagodzinski, K.R. Greene
Perinatal Research Group, Derriford Hospital.
Postgraduate Medical School, School of Computing, Univ. of Plymouth,
15.30-16.00
Tea
16:00-17:00
Keynote: Works in Theory but not in Practice? Some notes on the
Precautionary Principle
Sir Kenneth Calman and Denis Smith,
Centre for Risk and Crisis Management, Durham University.
17:00-17.15
Close and hand-over
Saturday, 17th April
This will provide the opportunity for informal discussions about
the issues raised during the workshop. This day will be spent on
the Isle of Arran, off the west Coast of Scotland.
For any further details contact:
Prof. Chris Johnson,
Department of Computer Science,
University of Glasgow,
Glasgow, G12 8QJ,
Scotland.
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tel.: +44 141 330 6053
fax.: +44 141 330 4913
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