Mobile computing in a hospital: the WARD-IN-HAND project
SAC '00 Proceedings of the 2000 ACM symposium on Applied computing - Volume 2
Mobile information access in the real world: A story of three wireless devices
Computers in Human Behavior
UAHCI '09 Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Universal Access in Human-Computer Interaction. Part III: Applications and Services
A usability study of nurses' interaction with tablet PC and PDA nursing documentation applications
IASTED-HCI '07 Proceedings of the Second IASTED International Conference on Human Computer Interaction
Developing a wearable assistant for hospital ward rounds: an experience report
IOT'08 Proceedings of the 1st international conference on The internet of things
Visualizing pain data for wheelchair users: a ubiquitous approach
Journal of Mobile Multimedia
A ubiquitous approach for visualizing back pain data
ICCSA'05 Proceedings of the 2005 international conference on Computational Science and Its Applications - Volume Part II
A Fuzzy Temporal Rule-based System for handling the Nursing Process on mobile devices
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
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A great deal of nursing documentation involves data collection at the point of care. In most inpatient settings this activity is carried out by nurses using paper forms or simply by memorizing the information and documenting it later on the patient's record. These methods for collecting data at point of care delay the update of the patient record and may result in loss of information. PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) technology can help overcome these problems. Their small size and their wireless connection capability make them a viable alternative for collecting and entering patient's data at the point of care. In this paper we describe a usability study in which we compared two versions (PDA and laptop) of a nursing documentation application in terms of the efficiency and satisfaction achieved by nurses while conducting typical tasks. The results of the study indicate that it take nurses significantly less time to look for vital signs measurements, acknowledge a pending medication order, enter I/O measurements and enter a daily assessment on a PDA than on a Laptop. However, it takes them significantly less time to read a paragraph, enter a set of vital sign measurements and write a note on a laptop than on a PDA. The results also indicate that with the exception of writing notes, the overall user satisfaction is very similar for the both systems.