DocumentCode
265916
Title
Safety analysis of clinical workflows: The case of the workflow within a radiology department
Author
Al-Qora´n, Lamis F. ; Sharvia, Septavera ; Gordon, Neil ; Walker, M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Hull, Kingston upon Hull, UK
fYear
2014
fDate
27-29 Aug. 2014
Firstpage
72
Lastpage
78
Abstract
Radiology Information Systems (RIS) and Picture Archiving and Communication systems (PACS) are used widely to help in the workflow management in radiology departments. Effective safety analysis tools are needed to ensure the reliability of these high-risk workflows, because errors that may happen through routine workflow propagate within the workflow to result in harmful failures of the system´s output. This paper showed how to apply a software technology called Hierarchically-Performed Hazard Origin and Propagation Studies (HiP-HOPS) to analyse the safety of RIS/PACS workflows. The results comprised identification of the root causes of hazardous workflow failures that may put patient´s life at risk. We concluded that HiP-HOPS is applicable to this area of healthcare and is able to present benefits through the detailed information on possible failures both their causes and effects. Therefore, it has the potential to improve the safety of RIS/PACS workflows and other clinical workflows.
Keywords
PACS; hazards; health care; radiology; safety; workflow management software; RIS/PACS workflows; clinical workflows; hazardous workflow failures; healthcare; hierarchically-performed hazard origin and propagation studies; high-risk workflows; picture archiving and communication systems; radiology department; radiology information systems; safety analysis tools; software technology; workflow management; Computed tomography; Hospitals; Medical diagnostic imaging; Picture archiving and communication systems; Radiology; Safety; HiPHOPS; clinical workflows; radiology; safety analysis;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Science and Information Conference (SAI), 2014
Conference_Location
London
Print_ISBN
978-0-9893-1933-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SAI.2014.6918174
Filename
6918174
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