Increasingly, research is becoming available that reveals the weaknesses and strengths of health information technologies. Everything from infusion pumps to EHR systems have been subjected to analysis. The new flow of information is wonderful to behold because it wasn’t too long ago that little in the way of actionable HIT research was available.
Research on usability, interoperability, and patient safety can lead to better clinical care software. From these studies, we are learning important information about workflow disruptions, clinician information needs, user interface issues, errors, etc. Now that we have more research, how do we use it to produce better products, to address the needs of HIT users?
Who actually builds HIT products? Software engineers. They turn feature requests and requirements lists into working software making software engineers a rate-limiting component of any process leading to new products. Therefore, at some point, research must make it into the hands of software engineers who then covert it into objects, methods, APIs, and data store specifications. Continue reading…




