Abstract

BackgroundPatient monitoring is indispensable in any operating room to follow the patient’s current health state based on measured physiological parameters. Reducing workload helps to free cognitive resources and thus influences human performance, which ultimately improves the quality of care. Among the many methods available to assess perceived workload, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Task Load Index (NASA-TLX) provides the most widely accepted tool. However, only few studies have investigated the validity of the NASA-TLX in the health care sector.ObjectiveThis study aimed to validate a modified version of the raw NASA-TLX in patient monitoring tasks by investigating its correspondence with expected lower and higher workload situations and its robustness against nonworkload-related covariates. This defines criterion validity.MethodsIn this pooled analysis, we evaluated raw NASA-TLX scores collected after performing patient monitoring tasks in four different investigator-initiated, computer-based, prospective, multicenter studies. All of them were conducted in three hospitals with a high standard of care in central Europe. In these already published studies, we compared conventional patient monitoring with two newly developed situation awareness–oriented monitoring technologies called Visual Patient and Visual Clot. The participants were resident and staff anesthesia and intensive care physicians, and nurse anesthetists with completed specialization qualification. We analyzed the raw NASA-TLX scores by fitting mixed linear regression models and univariate models with different covariates.ResultsWe assessed a total of 1160 raw NASA-TLX questionnaires after performing specific patient monitoring tasks. Good test performance and higher self-rated diagnostic confidence correlated significantly with lower raw NASA-TLX scores and the subscores (all P<.001). Staff physicians rated significantly lower workload scores than residents (P=.001), whereas nurse anesthetists did not show any difference in the same comparison (P=.83). Standardized distraction resulted in higher rated total raw NASA-TLX scores (P<.001) and subscores. There was no gender difference regarding perceived workload (P=.26). The new visualization technologies Visual Patient and Visual Clot resulted in significantly lower total raw NASA-TLX scores and all subscores, including high self-rated performance, when compared with conventional monitoring (all P<.001).ConclusionsThis study validated a modified raw NASA-TLX questionnaire for patient monitoring tasks. The scores obtained correctly represented the assumed influences of the examined covariates on the perceived workload. We reported high criterion validity. The NASA-TLX questionnaire appears to be a reliable tool for measuring subjective workload. Further research should focus on its applicability in a clinical setting.

Highlights

  • WorkloadThe World Health Organization considers attentive anesthesia providers to be essential to prevent perioperative disability and death [1]

  • We assessed a total of 1160 raw NASA-TLX questionnaires after performing specific patient monitoring tasks

  • The NASA-TLX questionnaire appears to be a reliable tool for measuring subjective workload

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Summary

Introduction

WorkloadThe World Health Organization considers attentive anesthesia providers to be essential to prevent perioperative disability and death [1]. To maintain high quality of care, all factors negatively affecting human performance should be minimized. For physicians and nurses working inside the operating theatre or intensive care unit, it is crucial to keep situation awareness at a high level through constant mental reassessment. A high workload is a psychological stress factor that takes up part of a person’s naturally limited working memory and leads to fewer cognitive resources being available. Only few studies have investigated the validity of the NASA-TLX in the health care sector

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