Execrable UI Of The Day
Aug. 5th, 2013 06:44 pmI spotted the most awful user interface on the IV pump that was used for my saline today ...

Visual description: The front of IV pump, featuring a smallish colour LCD screen and more than 30 coloured areas which appear to be buttons. The button-coloured areas are not raised or marked in any tactile way but are coloured ovals featuring things like arrows pointing to areas at the edge of the screen, numbers 0-9, and some other generic functions like "clear" and "cancel".
The LCD screen has some fairly generic information like the hospital name, patient number, and the number of millilitres of fluid to be infused. The largest words on the screen, in bright blue reverse video, say "Low Battery <30 min. PLUG IN NOW" in capital letters.
It wasn't until I got the nurse to plug it in twice, taken the above photo and sent it to a friend, and vaguely stared at the screen some more that I noticed that there is a small glyph beside the number 7 which vaguely resembles a power point and has a green LED lit up behind it. It's less than 10% of the size of the large text and it's not on the screen - it looks much more like a button than like the screen! The only thing that clued me in that it was informational, after being perplexed about the UI for ages, was the fact there's another glyph directly above it that vaguely resembles a battery and has no LED behind it.
Aside from being hideously bad UI, it confused both the nurses who I alerted about the message - neither they nor I realised that the machine was in fact correctly plugged in because all three of us assumed that plugging in the machine should make the huge error message go away, when in fact it did not. Eventually it went away about 30 minutes after being plugged in - presumably when the battery charge level reached a high enough level.
Today I am feeling sorry for nurses who have to deal with so many different versions of machines and should not have to be technical whizzes!
PS
"Execrable" is very hard to spell.

Visual description: The front of IV pump, featuring a smallish colour LCD screen and more than 30 coloured areas which appear to be buttons. The button-coloured areas are not raised or marked in any tactile way but are coloured ovals featuring things like arrows pointing to areas at the edge of the screen, numbers 0-9, and some other generic functions like "clear" and "cancel".
The LCD screen has some fairly generic information like the hospital name, patient number, and the number of millilitres of fluid to be infused. The largest words on the screen, in bright blue reverse video, say "Low Battery <30 min. PLUG IN NOW" in capital letters.
It wasn't until I got the nurse to plug it in twice, taken the above photo and sent it to a friend, and vaguely stared at the screen some more that I noticed that there is a small glyph beside the number 7 which vaguely resembles a power point and has a green LED lit up behind it. It's less than 10% of the size of the large text and it's not on the screen - it looks much more like a button than like the screen! The only thing that clued me in that it was informational, after being perplexed about the UI for ages, was the fact there's another glyph directly above it that vaguely resembles a battery and has no LED behind it.
Aside from being hideously bad UI, it confused both the nurses who I alerted about the message - neither they nor I realised that the machine was in fact correctly plugged in because all three of us assumed that plugging in the machine should make the huge error message go away, when in fact it did not. Eventually it went away about 30 minutes after being plugged in - presumably when the battery charge level reached a high enough level.
Today I am feeling sorry for nurses who have to deal with so many different versions of machines and should not have to be technical whizzes!
PS
"Execrable" is very hard to spell.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-05 09:01 am (UTC)FWIW, when I saw the picture, before I read the entry, I was all confused because of the error message while the pump was *obviously* plugged in due to the green light on the plug symbol. Guess I'm too used to reading IV UIs! :P
Are the saline infusions helping? *hugs*
no subject
Date: 2013-08-05 09:17 am (UTC)i just acquired a DVD player. now, i consider myself a fairly tech-savvy person, but it took me 45 minutes to set the damn thing up. the colors of the various signal plugs on the TV didn't quite match the colors on the wires that came with the player, although the only possible way to plug them in, while non-color-matched, does seem to work. the instruction manual was in Engrish, which actively made it harder to understand what to do. the instructions to get into "setup" mode were completely incomprehensible, and i only managed to get there by poking a lot of buttons randomly. i think i've got it right, but i can't tell until i manage to get a DVD to play.
now, for an entertainment device, that's just frustrating. but for a piece of medical equipment that a patient's life may depend upon, it's completely inexcusable. it's a good thing that you've got an analytical mind! i suggest you make a note of every device you see that's appallingly badly designed, and write or email the manufacturers. you might save someone else's life!
*hugs*
Urk
Date: 2013-08-06 03:03 am (UTC)WTF.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 05:55 am (UTC)Re: Urk
Date: 2013-08-06 09:06 am (UTC)Stupid UI.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 09:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 09:07 am (UTC)The infusions seem to be helping, touch wood, although today has generally sucked and I am muchly tired.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 09:09 am (UTC)Love you,
r
no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 11:02 am (UTC)i did look into the control room for the LINAC, and the operators would have shown me more if they'd had more time. there was a whole row of computer screens, accompanied by both keyboards and control panels, and it seemed quite efficient. all the radiation techs were very, very good at what they did.
but on the whole, medical technology probably needs more standardization, and more ergonomically designed controls!
love you too, dear penguin!