Methodology matters: doing research in the behavioral and social sciences
Human-computer interaction
Developing a Nomenclature for EMR Errors
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction. Part IV: Interacting in Various Application Domains
Safety testing of computerized provider order entry systems
Proceedings of the 2010 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering in Health Care
Proceedings of the 1st ACM International Health Informatics Symposium
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The FDA and other national regulatory agencies have expressed their intentions to begin enforcement of medical device regulations on Health Informatics Technology (HIT) vendors. A mechanism which might be employed to achieve this enforcement in the US is the Quality Systems Regulations (QSR), while similar legislation might be employed elsewhere. In order for vendors to achieve conformance with QSR regulations, they must first identify hazards which their products may pose. In order to identify these hazards we have undertaken a literature review from which we have extracted taxonomies of Clinical Informatics Systems (CIS) devices, systems and hazards. We present these three taxonomies, and a discussion of contemporary risk classfication strategies which are being applied to HIT. The taxonomies which have been developed provide actionable hazards for HIT vendors, and provide a potential basis for best practices in the engineering of HIT systems.