The key to profitability and success in both the medical device and the equipment markets often relates to how easy your products are to use. User acceptance and preference frequently is dependent upon ergonomic design.
Medical Device and Equipment Design helps you enhance your product design, maximize user acceptance, and minimize potential problems in the marketplace. It provides practical guidance on how to plan and incorporate ergonomic design principles into medical devices and equipment so users intuitively feel comfortable with the product.
Design engineers, usability and reliability engineers, software programmers, documentation specialists, product managers, quality engineers, and market/product managers will find this text invaluable in getting usability built into products from the very beginning.TAKING A USER-CENTERED APPROACH TO DESIGN How to Implement Usability Engineering Managing the Transition to a User-Centered Approach to Design Measuring the Usability Payoff
THE NEED FOR USABLE MEDICAL DEVICES Medical Device Usability: A Survey of Critical-Care Nurses Human Error Signals Opportunity for Design Improvement
DETERMINING USER REQUIREMENTS Conducting Effective Focus Groups The Making of a Task-Oriented Product Setting Product Usability Goals Computer-Based Tools for Anthropometric Design
DESIGN THE USER INTERFACE The Value of Human Factors Guidelines Improving the Visual Design of Computer Screens Making Color a Contributing Component of the User Interface The Role of Symbols in User Interfaces Communicating Clinical Information with Auditory Signals Designing Medical Devices for Older Users Cumulative Trauma Disorders: Implications for Product Design Designing for Portability Designing Packaging for Convenience and Safety Keyboards: Assessing User Satisfaction and Performancl“%