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Preventing Medication Dispensing Errors in Pharmacy Practice With Interpretable Machine Intelligence

Recruiting
18 years of age
Both
Phase N/A

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Overview

Pharmacists currently perform an independent double-check to identify drug-selection errors before they can reach the patient. However, the use of machine intelligence (MI) to support this cognitive decision-making work by pharmacists does not exist in practice. This research is being conducted to examine the effectiveness of the timing of machine intelligence (MI) advice on to determine if it results in lower task time, increased accuracy, and increased trust in the MI.

Description

Pharmacists currently perform an independent double-check currently to identify drug-selection errors before they can reach the patient. However, the use of machine intelligence (MI) to support this cognitive decision-making work by pharmacists does not exist in practice. Instead, pharmacists rely solely on reference images of the medication which they can compare to the prescription vial contents. Previous research has shown that decision support systems can effectively improve healthcare delivery efficiency and accuracy, while preventing adverse drug events. However, little is known about how MI technologies impact pharmacists' work performance and cognitive demand.

To facilitate the long-term symbiotic relationship between the pharmacists and the MI system, proper trust needs to be established. While trust has been identified as the central factor for effective human-machine teaming, issues arise when humans place unjustified trust in automated technologies do not place enough trust in them. Over trust in automation can lead to complacency and automation bias. For instance, the pharmacists may rely on the MI system to the extent that they blindly accept any recommendation by the system. Under trust can result in pharmacist disuse and potential abandonment of the MI system.

Furthermore, little is known about the timing of the MI advice on pharmacists' work performance. For example, showing the MI's advice while the pharmacist is performing the medication verification task may yield different results than showing the MI's advice after the pharmacist made their decision.

The study investigators have developed a MI system for medication images classification. The objective of this study is to examine the effectiveness of the timing of MI advice to determine if it results in lower task time, increased accuracy, and increased trust in the MI.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Licensed pharmacist in the United States
  • Age 18 years and older at screening
  • PC/Laptop with Microsoft Windows 10 or Mac (Macbook, iMac) with MacOS with Google Chrome, Edge, Opera, Safari, or Firefox web browser installed on the device
  • Screen resolution of 1024x968 pixels or more
  • A laptop integrated webcam or USB webcam is also required for the eye tracking purpose.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Participated in Wave 1 or Wave 2
  • Eyeglasses
  • Uncorrected cataracts, intraocular implants, glaucoma, or permanently dilated pupil
  • Require a screen reader/magnifier or other assistive technology to use the computer
  • Eye movement or alignment abnormalities (lazy eye, strabismus, nystagmus)

Study details

Machine Intelligence in the Pharmacy

NCT06245044

University of Michigan

29 April 2024

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