My 2 cents....
Softwares are replica's to human brain.
And, the human brain is a very complex thing and an unfathomable thing. Anything that tries to replicate will eventually attain complexity over a period of time even if it starts as a simple thing at its infancy stage.
For engineering software, inputs are maths oriented, more or less standardised and are immune to the human being using it.
Whereas, the software in the medical field trying to assist the doctors is not math oriented; it is text-entry oriented; But, it should do so in a free wheel manner, user-doctor oriented. Because, entries into the software cannot be standardised as these are human thoughts, human assessments, and human feelings. They cannot be constrained into the options of drop-boxes, radio buttons, check boxes.
When the present software, in its evolution stage, is constraining the doctors in this fashion, doctors are feeling helpless and the software is really under-performing in bringing out the real intent of the patient-doctor conversations. This is the frustration expressed by the 'hands-on person cum user' of the software - the doctor.
Of course, as any software does, this medical software is also capable of dishing out statistics which cannot be done by a human brain. This is what Gregg Meyer, the chief clinical officer at Partners HealthCare, boasts of about the benefits of sticking to the software.
I see a possible solution here -
1. Every widget that demands entry by the doctor should have a 'voice to text' converting widget that we see in Google Search or in Whatsapp text boxes. 99% of the doctor's intentions, thoughts, feelings, assessments would be converted instantly into the text entries, and if any corrections are needed here and there, they could be done by the doctors with minimal typing on the key-board.
2. All the schools across the globe should introduce type-writing classes as a part of curriculum in one of the classes during schooling. This skill will definitely helps professionals in their later stages.
G Sreenivasa Murthy, PMP
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