Final Output

Research-Backed Design

As I mentioned, the patient readings were the most challenging but high impact aspect of this whole product. I've broken down how I matched research insights into final design decisions.

Insight #1

Clinicians are working in quick time frames.

It was  important to allow clinicians to find the data they were looking for quickly. We needed to find every opportunity to simplify.

Design Solution

We created filter options that allowed clinicians to find the vitals they were looking for without needing to context switch.

Insight #2

Clinicians are not glued to the screen

Since clinicians were constantly moving around their office/clinic, moving from monitor to patient.

Design Solution

I created this highlights dashboard, that allowed clinicians to get a high-level overview of vitals. By using a combination of larger font size, color, hierarchy, and symbols, these cards communicated the most relevant information.

All clinicians had to do, was select a vital and enter a detailed view (see next example).

Insight #3

Clinicians Are Overwhelmed

Clinicians don't need more data, they need the data to be presented intuitively.

Design Solution

By hiding the table and charts in the Highlight Cards, we were able to avoid more levels of navigation and minimize context switching.

If clinicians wanted to look at the original UI from the device, all they had to do was click "Full Dashboard," which would take them to the web app.

Patient Overview

This simple overview screen required us to pay careful attention to best practices in hospital systems (should we use Sex or Gender? What is the format of dates in hospitals?). Understanding what to present about a patient, and what language to use, was imperative in building a trustworthy product.

Doctor's Note

The doctor's note is essential because it is their most straightforward way of record-keeping for patients. Since our engineers were not ready to build a function that synced this information to EHRs (the main storage of information), we included a simple "Copy Note" function, so clinicians could quickly bring this information over.