Dear all,
[ I have taken a leaf out of Danny's book and decided to limit my
contributions to sensible, non-confrontational ones! Apols for occasional
rantings in the past ;-) ]
I am trying to produce a series of short videos illustrating the possible
use of computers providing decision support in clinical practice, and their
impact on the clinician / patient relationship. I'd like at least one of
these to be in an acute / A+E / prehospital setting, and potentially to
demonstrate the use of hand-held computers / touch screens etc etc.
Triage is an obvious niche for computer-aided decision support in A+E, but
can anyone suggest other interesting applications? Clinicians using
computerised clinical guidelines to assist with history taking and treatment
decisions? Automatic generation of customised care plans? Accessing
Hazardous chemical databases "in-the-field"?
We aim to show these videos to groups of clinicians / patients to get
feedback on the software we are developing, so the more "thought provoking"
/ "controversial" the context the better.
And if anyone with "thespian tendancies" is interested in taking part, let
me know.
Any ideas?
Jon Bury
Clinical Reserach Fellow
Advanced Computation Laboratory, ICRF. www.acl.icnet.uk
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