TRU-Check

Trauma Resuscitation Digital Checklist

Researchers at Drexel University, Rutgers University, and Children’s National Medical Center have developed a digital checklist for trauma resuscitation.  The checklist was designed based on paper formats currently in clinical use, integrating both compliance and decision-making capabilities.  Each section of the paper checklist corresponds to a tab on the electronic version with a mobile operating system.  Users can easily take notes and track items that have been completed, with a time stamp upon each checked item.  The digital checklist allows for rapid data entry and corrections of erroneous data. Ideally, the checklist will improve the performance and response time of the trauma team, leading to improved patient outcomes.  The checklist has been pilot tested with trauma surgeons and nurses in clinical settings.

Applications

  • Digital checklist for trauma resuscitation
  • Clinical dashboard for trauma room
  • Capture patient and process information
  • Adapted for high-risk, fast-paced treatment of severely injured patients

Advantages

  • Real-time completion of tasks with facile transitions between tasks
  • At-a-glance overview of items remaining to complete
  • Note taking and typing features with auto-completion for rapid data entry
  • Time-stamp interactions
  • Integrate with electronic health records
  • Increase awareness of healthcare workers in clinical settings and facilitate high-level team coordination

Intellectual Property and Development Status

Copyright

References

Sarcevic A. and Ferraro N.  On the use of electronic documentation systems in fast-paced, time-critical medical settings.  Interacting with Computers, 2017, 29(2), p. 203-219.

Kulp L. et al. Exploring design opportunities for a context-adaptive medical checklist through technology probe approach. Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI 2017 Conference on Designing Interactive Systems (DIS 2017), pp. 57-68, 2017.

Sarcevic A. et al. Checklist as a memory externalization tool during a critical care process. Proceedings of the American Medical Informatics Association 2016 Annual Symposium (AMIA 2016), pp. 1080–1089, 2016.

Sarcevic A. et al. Design challenges in converting paper to digital checklists for dynamic medical settings. Proceedings of the 10th EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare (Pervasive Health 2016), pp. 1-8, 2016.

Kusunoki D.S. et al.  Sketching awareness: a participatory study to elicit designs for supporting ad hoc emergency medical work.  Computer Supported Cooperative Work, 2015, 24(1), p. 1-38.

Contact Information

Sarah Johnson, Ph.D.

Licensing Manager

215-571-4291

sarah.a.johnson@drexel.edu