Abstract
Introduction: All hospitals in the province of Styria (Austria) are well equipped with sophisticated Information Technology, which
provides all-encompassing on-screen patient information. Previous research made on the theoretical properties, advantages and
disadvantages, of reading from paper vs. reading from a screen has resulted in the assumption that reading from a screen is slower, less
accurate and more tiring. However, recent flat screen technology, especially on the basis of LCD, is of such high quality that obviously
this assumption should now be challenged. As the electronic storage and presentation of information has many advantages in addition
to a faster transfer and processing of the information, the usage of electronic screens in clinics should outperform the traditional
hardcopy in both execution and preference ratings.
This study took part in a County hospital Styria, Austria, with 111 medical professionals, working in a real-life setting. They were
each asked to read original and authentic diagnosis reports, a gynecological report and an internal medical document, on both screen
and paper in a randomly assigned order. Reading comprehension was measured by the Chunked Reading Test, and speed and accuracy
of reading performance was quantified. In order to get a full understanding of the clinicians’ preferences, subjective ratings were also
collected.
Results: Wilcoxon Signed Rank Tests showed no significant differences on reading performance between paper vs. screen. However,
medical professionals showed a significant (90%) preference for reading from paper. Despite the high quality and the benefits of
electronic media, paper still has some qualities which cannot provided electronically do date.
provides all-encompassing on-screen patient information. Previous research made on the theoretical properties, advantages and
disadvantages, of reading from paper vs. reading from a screen has resulted in the assumption that reading from a screen is slower, less
accurate and more tiring. However, recent flat screen technology, especially on the basis of LCD, is of such high quality that obviously
this assumption should now be challenged. As the electronic storage and presentation of information has many advantages in addition
to a faster transfer and processing of the information, the usage of electronic screens in clinics should outperform the traditional
hardcopy in both execution and preference ratings.
This study took part in a County hospital Styria, Austria, with 111 medical professionals, working in a real-life setting. They were
each asked to read original and authentic diagnosis reports, a gynecological report and an internal medical document, on both screen
and paper in a randomly assigned order. Reading comprehension was measured by the Chunked Reading Test, and speed and accuracy
of reading performance was quantified. In order to get a full understanding of the clinicians’ preferences, subjective ratings were also
collected.
Results: Wilcoxon Signed Rank Tests showed no significant differences on reading performance between paper vs. screen. However,
medical professionals showed a significant (90%) preference for reading from paper. Despite the high quality and the benefits of
electronic media, paper still has some qualities which cannot provided electronically do date.
Originalsprache | englisch |
---|---|
Seiten (von - bis) | 563-570 |
Fachzeitschrift | International Journal of Human-Computer Studies |
Jahrgang | 69 |
Ausgabenummer | 9 |
DOIs | |
Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - 2011 |
Fields of Expertise
- Information, Communication & Computing
Treatment code (Nähere Zuordnung)
- Theoretical
- Experimental