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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Jan 3, 2025
Date Accepted: May 8, 2025

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

User-Centered Design of Trauma Systems Solutions for Retriage of Patients With Injury: Mixed Methods Study

Slocum JD, Jelke D, Mai Q, Johnson J, Nguyen ML, Cong L, Chandrasekaran A, Holl JL, Moklyak Y, Mis J, Gabaldo M, Adams JG, Brigode WM, Voights M, Andersen R, Gilbert T, Siparsky N, Proust A, Stey AM, Berry AB

User-Centered Design of Trauma Systems Solutions for Retriage of Patients With Injury: Mixed Methods Study

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e70846

DOI: 10.2196/70846

PMID: 40862520

PMCID: 12381891

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

User-Centered Design of Trauma Systems Solutions for Re-Triage of Injured Patients: A Mixed Methods Study

  • John Dwight Slocum; 
  • David Jelke; 
  • Qixuan Mai; 
  • Julie Johnson; 
  • My LT Nguyen; 
  • Lixuan Cong; 
  • Aditya Chandrasekaran; 
  • Jane L Holl; 
  • Yuriy Moklyak; 
  • Justin Mis; 
  • Molly Gabaldo; 
  • James G. Adams; 
  • William M Brigode; 
  • MaryBeth Voights; 
  • Rebecca Andersen; 
  • Tamuriat Gilbert; 
  • Nicole Siparsky; 
  • Arthur Proust; 
  • Anne M Stey; 
  • Andrew B.L Berry

ABSTRACT

Background:

Re-triage is the emergent inter-hospital transfer of severely injured patients from non/low-level to high-level trauma centers.

Objective:

The aim was to apply user-centered design to develop a robust, acceptable, and feasible solution to improve the re-triage process.

Methods:

The mixed methods, observational, cross-sectional study applied the 5 phases of a user-centered design approach, including Phase 1: Understanding the design needs, through site visit observations and virtual focus groups; Phase 2: Ideation of potential solutions through a second round of virtual focus groups; Phase 3: Rank Ordering solutions to identify the most robust, acceptable, and potentially feasible solutions; Phase 4: Prototyping by creating low-fidelity prototypes for the highest-ranked solutions; and Phase 5: Validation of the robustness of the prototypes through virtual focus groups. All virtual sessions were recorded, transcribed, and inductively coded to generate themes of robustness, acceptability, and feasibility of the re-triage solution. Thematic analysis was anchored on the Desirability, Viability, and Feasibility Design Thinking Methodology.

Results:

A total of 19 sessions were conducted across all 5 phases with 49 participants from 12 trauma centers across Illinois. Participants included front-line users and leadership. The key design requirement was resource transparency between centers. The ideation phase produced 70 solutions. A systemwide bed-tracker was ranked the highest by participants. Protoyping and validation resulted in a centralized, systemwide, bed-tracker with hourly updated bed availability being the final solution to improve the re-triage of trauma patients from non-trauma/low-level and high-level trauma centers.

Conclusions:

A 5 phase user-centered design approach resulted in a single solution consisting in a centralized bed-tracker of available beds at high-level trauma centers to improve re-triage.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Slocum JD, Jelke D, Mai Q, Johnson J, Nguyen ML, Cong L, Chandrasekaran A, Holl JL, Moklyak Y, Mis J, Gabaldo M, Adams JG, Brigode WM, Voights M, Andersen R, Gilbert T, Siparsky N, Proust A, Stey AM, Berry AB

User-Centered Design of Trauma Systems Solutions for Retriage of Patients With Injury: Mixed Methods Study

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e70846

DOI: 10.2196/70846

PMID: 40862520

PMCID: 12381891

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