Background: Although electronic health record nursing summaries aim to provide a concise overview of patient data, they often fall short of meeting nurses' information needs, leading to underutilization. This gap arises from a lack of involvement of nurses in the design of health information technologies.

Objective: The purpose of this exploratory co-design case study was to solicit insights from nurses regarding nursing summary design considerations, including key information types and the preferred design prototype.

Methods: We recruited clinical nurses (N=33) from 7 inpatient units at a university hospital in the Midwestern United States using a purposive sampling method. We used images from a simulated nursing summary to generate visual card versions of the 46 information types currently included in an electronic health record vendor-generated nursing summary. Participants selected which cards to include and arranged them in their designs based on their perceived relevance of the information types to the summary and their preferred reading layout. The nurses' perceived relevance of information types to the summary was analyzed by quantifying the frequency of included cards, while the nurses' preferred reading layout was analyzed by quantifying the occurrence of closely paired cards to identify common groupings. After participants evaluated the information type cards, debriefing interviews were conducted and analyzed thematically to explore their rationales for the desired content and its arrangement.

Results: The participants demonstrated a high level of engagement in the activities. On average, all 33 participants included 61% (n=28) of the total information types (n=46). The most frequently included cards were "unit specimen" (results of the analysis of body fluid, tissue, or urine), "activity," "diet," and "hospital problems," each included by 33 participants. Participants most frequently preferred adjacency of the following pairs: "activity" and "diet" (paired by 26 participants; 79%) and "notes to physicians" and "notes to treatment team" (paired by 25 participants; 76%). Participants preferred arranging the cards to improve information accessibility, focusing on key information types.

Conclusions: Involving nurses in the co-design process may result in more useful and usable designs, thereby reducing the time required to navigate nursing summaries. Future work should include refining and evaluating prototypes based on the designs created by the nurses.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/68906DOI Listing

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