Events Calendar

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2014 OSEHRA Open Source Summit: Global Collaboration in Health IT
2014-09-03 - 2014-09-05    
8:00 am - 5:00 pm
OSEHRA is an alliance of corporations, agencies, and individuals dedicated to advancing the state of the art in open source electronic health record (EHR) systems [...]
Connected Health Summit
2014-09-04    
All Day
The inaugural Connected Health Summit: Engaging Consumers is the only event focused exclusively on the consumer-focused perspective of the fast-growing digital health/connected health market. The [...]
Health Impact MidWest
2014-09-08    
All Day
The HealthIMPACT Forum is where health system C-Suite Executives meet.  Designed by and for health system leaders like you, it provides an unmatched faculty of [...]
Simulation Summit 2014
2014-09-11    
All Day
Hilton Toronto Downtown | September 11 - 12, 2014 Meeting Location Hilton Toronto Downtown 145 Richmond Street West Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2L2, CANADA Tel: 416-869-3456 [...]
Webinar : EHR: Demand Results!
2014-09-11    
2:00 pm - 2:45 pm
09/11/14 | 2:00 - 2:45 PM ET If you are using an EHR, you deserve the best solution for your money. You need to demand [...]
Healthcare Electronic Point of Service: Automating Your Front Office
2014-09-11    
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
09/11/14 | 3:00 - 4:00 PM ET Start capitalizing on customer convenience trends today! Today’s healthcare reimbursement models put a greater financial risk on healthcare [...]
e-Patient Connections 2014
2014-09-15    
All Day
e-Patient Connections 2014 Follow Us! @ePatCon2014 Join in the Conversation at #ePatCon The Internet, social media platforms and mobile health applications are enabling patients to take an [...]
Free Webinar - Don’t Be Denied: Avoiding Billing and Coding Errors
2014-09-16    
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Tuesday, September 16, 2014 1:00 PM Eastern / 10:00 AM Pacific   Stopping the denial on an individual claim is just the first step. Smart [...]
Health 2.0 Fall Conference 2014
2014-09-21    
12:00 am
We’re back in Santa Clara on September 21-24, 2014 and once again bringing together the best and brightest speakers, newest product demos, and top networking opportunities for [...]
Healthcare Analytics Summit 14
2014-09-24    
All Day
Transforming Healthcare Through Analytics Join top executives and professionals from around the U.S. for a memorable educational summit on the incredibly pressing topic of Healthcare [...]
AHIMA 2014 Convention
2014-09-27    
All Day
As the most extensive exposition in the industry, the AHIMA Convention and Exhibit attracts decision makers and influencers in HIM and HIT. Last year in [...]
2014 Annual Clinical Coding Meeting
2014-09-27    
12:00 am
Event Type: Meeting HIM Domain: Coding Classification and Reimbursement Continuing Education Units Available: 10 Location: San Diego, CA Venue: San Diego Convention Center Faculty: TBD [...]
AHIP National Conferences on Medicare & Medicaid
2014-09-28    
All Day
Balancing your organization’s short- and long-term needs as you navigate the changes in the Medicare and Medicaid programs can be challenging. AHIP’s National Conferences on Medicare [...]
A Behavioral Health Collision At The EHR Intersection
2014-09-30    
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Date/Time Date(s) - 09/30/2014 2:00 pm Hear Why Many Organizations Are Changing EHRs In Order To Remain Competitive In The New Value-Based Health Care Environment [...]
Meaningful Use and The Rise of the Portals
2014-10-02    
12:00 pm - 12:45 pm
Meaningful Use and The Rise of the Portals: Best Practices in Patient Engagement Thu, Oct 2, 2014 10:30 PM - 11:15 PM IST Join Meaningful [...]
Events on 2014-09-04
Connected Health Summit
4 Sep 14
San Diego
Events on 2014-09-08
Health Impact MidWest
8 Sep 14
Chicago
Events on 2014-09-15
e-Patient Connections 2014
15 Sep 14
New York
Events on 2014-09-21
Health 2.0 Fall Conference 2014
21 Sep 14
Santa Clara
Events on 2014-09-24
Healthcare Analytics Summit 14
24 Sep 14
Salt Lake City
Events on 2014-09-27
AHIMA 2014 Convention
27 Sep 14
San Diego
Events on 2014-09-28
Events on 2014-09-30
Events on 2014-10-02
Articles

Dec 5 : Healthcare Software: Put Development In Context

healthcare software

Developers must walk a mile in clinicians’ shoes to create great healthcare applications.

 While presenting a webinar on visualization, I asked, “In what environments are you gathering software requirements?”

Of the approximately 75 participants, 71% said conference rooms, 68% said conference calls, and slightly more than half said they go into the clinical setting to gather requirements. Although I do not doubt that half the participants enter the clinical setting, I couldn’t help but wonder: If clinicians answered that question, would they say IT visits more than 50% of the time to gather requirements for new software, technology, or workflow? If so, are those technologists going into the field prepared with the right mindset and skillset?

Being equipped with customer empathy is a great start. However, customer empathy needs to be coupled with “contextual inquiry,” a skill crucial for building great software.

My friend Sarah Rottenberg, associate director of the Integrated Product Design Program at the University of Pennsylvania, says, “Contextual inquiry provides teams with a toolset for understanding the needs of the people who will ultimately be using their product. It enables teams to understand what people do, their process, workflows and how the context of use influences actual use. It also helps teams understand why people do what they do, as well as their attitudes, emotions, and values that are equally critical to account for as we design.” I invited Sarah to teach some of our teams contextual inquiry, and the insights those teams have gained into user needs have been measurably effective.

The concept of contextual inquiry isn’t new. A great example of the power of immersing teams in the customers’ mindset and world comes from former Procter & Gamble CEO A.G. Lafley, in his book The Game-Changer. In 2002, as a reaction to failed products in Mexico and the need to improve product performance, P&G created a consumer immersion program called Living It. This program enabled its employees to live with consumers in their homes, eat meals with them, and tag along on shopping trips. Employees learned through firsthand experience how P&G’s products either fit (or didn’t) into consumers’ lifestyles. This discipline of contextual inquiry is a large improvement over focus groups where observers cannot fully understand the “context” of where, when, how, and why people use a product.

In addition to Living It, P&G also created the Working It programwhich gave employees the opportunity to work behind the counter of a small shop. Intuit’s Catalyst program delivered the same level of consumer immersion. If you were in their payroll division, you’d run payroll for an adopted small business. If you were in Intuit’s retail point of sale business, you’d find yourself in the local candy store working the cash register.

Surely, if this type of immersion is so important for a consumer product, why in the world aren’t we aggressively adopting and executing it within healthcare? The need for us to get a solution right the first time in healthcare isn’t because it is profitable. It is because it is critical to helping people live the healthiest lives possible.

Living or working with people in their context helps us uncover the “job” for which the customer will buy a product. One problem with gathering requirements in conference rooms or conference calls — or really anywhere outside of the context — is that we cannot gather unarticulated needs. Without being in the consumer’s environment we cannot understand what they cannot articulate or what they do not want to say. To be honest, consumers cannot always tell you what they truly want.

While I do not believe one can simply read a book and understand contextual inquiry enough to actually execute the skills, I will offer a framework that practitioners often use to guide both observations and the understanding the observations: AEIOU. This acronym represents the Activities, Environments, Interaction, Objects, and Users that observations need to be coded into. While teams are out, they can gather data via photographs, note-taking, interviews, observation, videos, and other resources. They can then use AEIOU as the framework to organize what they learn. A framework such as AEIOU encourages people to look at the entire context, paying attention to parts of the experience they might otherwise have overlooked.

This is directly applicable to developing successful healthcare applications. I don’t see how we can build software that delights our users if we fail to immerse ourselves in their context with the mindset of customer empathy, coupled with the skillset of contextual inquiry. Binding these together and executing on them will help us deliver both the application and the accompanying “love metric” our customers want a product to deliver. Remember, if they love it we have succeeded.

 

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