Abstract

Background Unnoticed user slips may contribute to adverse events, but medical devices can be designed to help detect and block some slips, thus enabling the user to take corrective action. Obviously different designs achieve this with greater or lesser success [1]. This paper shows how comparison of alternative design features for a “5-key” user interface (figure 1) can help reduce number entry errors. 5-key interfaces are widely-used because they look intuitive and require very little physical space.

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