The goal is to analyze the physician’s behavior and better understand the dynamics of the interactions of the doctor with the electronic medical records and the patients in front of them. The eventual goal is to provide useful input on how to run the medical practice more efficiently.
Very often physicians pay attention to information on a computer screen, rather than looking directly at the patient. “With the heavy demand that current medical records put on the physician, doctors look at the screen instead of looking at their patients,” says Weibel. “Important clues such as facial expression, and direct eye-contact between patient and physician are therefore lost.”
The
ChronoSense recording tool captures (at left) the blurred RGB image as
recorded from the Kinect. On the right, the depth image with overlaid
joint and gaze estimation based on yaw, roll and pitch. Once the Start
Logging button is pressed, the recording process starts and the data are
streamed to a folder on the computer. After collection is complete, the
data can be reviewed, visualized and analyzed in the companion
ChronoViz software application.The Lab-in-a-Box has been developed as part of Quantifying Electronic Medical Record Usability to Improve Clinical Workflow (QUICK), a running study funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and directed by Zia Agha, MD. The system is currently being deployed at the UC San Diego Medical Center, and the San Diego Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center.
The compact suitcase contains a set of tools to record activity in the office. A depth camera from a Microsoft Kinect device records body and head movements. An eye tracker follows where the doctor is looking. A special 360-degree microphone records audio in the room. The Lab-in-a-Box is also linked to the doctor’s computer, so it can keep track of keyboard strokes, movements of the mouse, and pop-up menus that may divert the doctor’s attention.
The greatest value of the Lab-in-a-Box, however, is in the software designed to merge, synchronize and segment data streams from the various sensors – assessing the extent to which a certain confluence of activity may lead to distraction on the part of the physician. For example, says Weibel, lots of head and eye movement would suggest that the doctor is multitasking between the computer and the patient.
Computer Science and Engineering research scientist Nadir WeibelThe Lab-in-a-Box work is funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) in connection with quantifying electronic medical record usability to improve clinical workflow. The overall project runs through June 2016.