A majority of nurses believe that connected medical devices can reduce medical errors

The key premise of the survey was that hospital efforts to use medical devices to lower medical errors may actually lead to medical errors when those devices are not “seamlessly connected.” In other words, the devices need to be able to easily share information in an accurate, timely manner.

Perry Payne, MD/JD/MPP, iMedicalApps on 

Nurse with digital tablet talks to woman in hospital bed

The frequency at which nurses re-enter the same data into each machine needs to be reduced. In addition, devices often don’t share their information with electronic medical records requiring nurses to record data manually and enter it into the medical record.

Key findings of the survey according to a press release and survey overview released by West Health are as follows:

  • 50% of nurses surveyed witnessed a medical error resulting from a lack of co-ordination among medical devices in hospital settings.
  • 60% of nurses surveyed indicated that medical errors could be reduced significantly if medical devices were connected and shared data with each other automatically.
  • 46% of nurses surveyed stated that an error is “extremely or very likely to occur when information must be manually transcribed from one device to another.”
  • 69% of nurses surveyed stated that “manually transcribing data is very likely to take time away from patients who need attention.”
  • 74% of nurses surveyed agreed that coordinating data collected by medical devices is burdensome
  • 93% of nurses surveyed agreed that medical devices should be able to seamlessly share data with one another automatically

Overall, managing devices and data entry is taking many nurses away from what they are there to do – take care of patients. However, the desire for seamless interaction between devices poses a great challenge given the various companies and software platforms associated with the various devices used in a hospital. In addition, coordinating these devices with electronic health records can add another layer to this challenge because various electronic health record systems may be used by one hospital or health system and the EHR’s may not be interoperable.

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