In the Emergency Department we’ve been evaluating an early unit of Google Glass, a high tech pair of glasses that includes a video camera, video screen, speaker, microphone, touch pad, and motion sensor.
We have been able to access our internal web-based ED Dashboard on Glass, in a secure manner that ensures all data stays within the BIDMC firewall. Clinicians can now speak with the patient, examine them, and perform procedures while simultaneously seeing data from the ED Dashboard in their field of view.
Beyond the technical challenges of bringing wearable computers to BIDMC, we had other concerns—protecting security, evaluating patient reaction, and ensuring clinician usability.
Here’s what we’ve learned thus far:
Patients have been intrigued by Google Glass, but no one has expressed a concern about them. Boston is home to many techies and a few patients asked detailed questions about the technology. The bright orange pair of Glass we have been testing is as subtle as a neon hunter's vest, so it was hard to miss.
Staff members have definitely noticed them and responded with a mixture of intrigue and skepticism. Those who tried them on briefly did seem impressed.
Glass is a new medium that seems best suited for retrieval of summarized information and it really differentiates itself when it comes to real-time updates and notifications. When paired with location services, it will be able to truly deliver actionable information to clinicians in real time. We believe the ability to access and confirm clinical information at the bedside is one of the strongest features of Google Glass.
Our Google Glass unit has been tested by a limited set of four emergency physicians serving as beta users since 12/17/13. In addition to our four beta users, we've also had impromptu testing with at least 10 other staff members since 1/24/14 to get feedback to refine the user experience. We needed to rigorously test our setup to ensure that the application is not only reliable and intuitive, but improved the workflow of clinicians rather than impede it. We have learned a lot, and will continue testing with more interested clinical providers going forward.
I believe wearable computing will replace tablet-based computing for many clinicians who need their hands free and instant access to information.
Really Awesome experiment. Is it primarily information IN at this time? Not knowing enough about Google glass, could it help reduce physician "clicks" documenting in the EMR?
ReplyDeleteA nurse practitioner in our graduate Health Informatics program said she would love to have technology that would free her hands to do other work.
ReplyDeleteHave you also tried testing glass with patients for their perspective?
I would be interested to know if you found any methods of bringing up patient information quicker. IE Scan 2 or 3D barcode on the patient's wristband or something to populate the patient ID search field. Thank you for the article, trying to understand how best to use this new technology in the crazy new world we live in. If you could do the barcode thing, you could put something like that outside of a room and make that a search field as well...
ReplyDelete@Dennis - there are a number of applications that have been developed which can scan bar codes and return information. The majority of these have thus far focused on shopping i.e. scan a product and get product details including the price returned along with options to buy the product from a variety of online stores. However there is no reason why the bar-code could not return specific information such as a patient ID.
ReplyDeleteLooks very similar to a science fair project my son did last year http://m.rmoutlook.com/article/20130704/RMO0801/307049983/banff-student-takes-bronze-at-science-fair
ReplyDeleteDid you see that the UW Madison Vet School had a nice little video on about Google Glass in the clinical setting? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jpn0389KXOM&feature=youtu.be
ReplyDelete