Section 1: Devices, Tools, and Healthcare IT
1. Designing for Medical Device Safety
Russell J. Branaghan, Emily A. Hildebrand and L. Bryant Foster
2. Designing for Medication Safety
Sadaf Kazi, Allen R. Chen and Nicole L. Mollenkopf
3. Design for Digital Health
Joseph A. Cafazzo
4. Design for eHealth and Telehealth
Dena Al-Thani, Savio Monteiro and Lakshman S. Tamil
5. Design of Mobile Health Technology
Plinio Pelegrini Morita
6. Design for Effective Care Collaboration
Patrice Dolhonde Tremoulet, Susan Harkness Regli and Ramya Krishnan
Section 2: Healthcare Systems
7. Design for Critical Care
D. Kirk Hamilton
8. Design for Emergencies
Yuval Bitan
9. Design for Resilience
Lisa Sundahl Platt
10. Design for Collaborative Work
Rachel E. Mason and Ashley M. Hughes
11. Design for Stress, Fatigue, and Workload Management
Joseph K. Nuamah and Ranjana K. Mehta
12. Design for Cognitive Support
L.C. Schubel, N. Muthu, D.J. Karavite, R. Arnold and K.M. Miller
13. Design for Improved Workflow
Mustafa Ozkaynak, Blaine Reeder, Sun Young Park and Jina Huh-Yoo
14. Design for Self-Care
Victor P. Cornet, Carly Daley, Luiz H. Cavalcanti, Amit Parulekar and Richard J. Holden
Section 3: Special Population
15. Design for Inclusivity
Natalie C. Benda, Enid Montague and Rupa S. Valdez
16. Design for Global Health
Alessandra N. Bazzano and Shirley D. Yan
17. Design of Health Information and Communication Technologies for Older Adults
Christina N. Harrington, lyndsie Marie Koon and Wendy A. Rogers
Arathi Sethumadhavan is the Head of User Research of Ethics & Society in Cloud+AI at Microsoft, where she is responsible for bringing the perspectives of traditionally disempowered and neglected communities into shaping products. Key technology areas include AI across speech, computer vision, face recognition, and mixed reality. Prior to joining Microsoft, she worked at Medtronic, where she provided human factors leadership to multiple products in the Cardiac Rhythm and Heart Failure portfolio, including the worlds smallest pacemaker. She has also spent several years investigating the implications of automation on air traffic controller performance and situation awareness. She has published numerous articles on a range of topics from patient safety, affective computing, and human-robot interaction, has delivered nearly 50 talks at national and international conferences, and been recognized by the American Psychological Foundation, the American Psychological Association, and the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. Arathi has a PhD in Human Factors Psychology from Texas Tech University and an undergraduate degree in Computer Science from Calicut University. Farzan Sasangohar, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering as well as Environmental and Occupational Health at Texas A&M University. He is also a Scientist and Assistant Professor at the Houston Methodist Hospitals Center for Outcomes Research and Department of Surgery. Prior to joining TAMU, he worked as the Manager of Design Research at TD Bank and as a Research Scientist at MIT AeroAstro. He has experience designing, developing, and evaluating human-systems in different domains such as aviation, process control, surface transportation, finance, and health care. Farzan has received a PhD in Mechanical and Industrial Engineering from the University of Toronto in 2015, an SM in Engineering Systems from MIT in 2011, a MASc and BCS in Systems Design Engineering and Computer Science from the University of Waterloo in 2010 and 2007, and a BA in Information Technology from York University in 2009. He has authored more than 100 peer-reviewed publications and his research, teaching, and service have received national and international recognition. Farzan's research interests include remote health and performance monitoring, system resilience and safety, and user-centered design.