Thursday 27 March 2014

Mind the gap: the gulfs between idealised and real practice

I've given several talks and written short articles about the gap between idealised and real practice in the use of medical devices. But to date I've blurred the distinctions between concerns from a development perspective and those from a procurement and use perspective.

Developers have to make assumptions about how their devices will be used, and to design and test (and build safety cases, etc.) on that basis. Their obligation (and challenge) is to make the assumptions as accurate as possible for their target market segment. And to make the assumptions as explicit as possible, particularly for subsequent purchasing and use. This is easier said than done: I write as someone who signed an agreement on Tuesday to do a pile of work on our car, most of which was required but part of which was not; how the unnecessary work got onto the job sheet I do not know, but because I'd signed for it, I had to pay for it. Ouch! If I can accidentally sign for a little bit of unnecessary work on the car, how much easier is it for a purchasing officer to sign off for unnecessary features, or slightly inappropriate features, on a medical device? [Rhetorical question.]

Developers have to work for generic market segments, whether those are defined by the technological infrastructure within which the device sits, the contexts and purposes for which the device will be used, the level of training of its users, or all of the above. One device probably can't address all needs, however desirable 'consistency' might be.

In contrast, a device in use has to fit a particular infrastructure, context, purpose, user capability... So there are many knowns where previously there were unknowns. And maybe the device fits well, and maybe it doesn't. And if it doesn't, then something needs to change. Maybe it was the wrong device (and needs to be replaced or modified); maybe it's the infrastructure or context that needs to be changed; maybe the users need to be trained differently / better.

When there are gaps (i.e., when technology doesn't fit properly), people find workarounds. We are so ingenious! Some of the workarounds are mostly positive (such as appropriating a tool to do something it wasn't designed for, but for which it serves perfectly well); some introduce real vulnerabilities into the system (by violating safety features to achieve a short-term goal). When gaps aren't even recognised, we can't even think about them or how to design to bridge them. We need to be alert to the gaps between design and use.

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