ABSTRACT
Interest in centralized monitoring in labor and delivery units is growing because
it affords the opportunity to monitor multiple patients simultaneously. However, a
long history of research on sustained attention reveals these types of monitoring
tasks can be problematic. The goal of the present experiment was to examine the ability
of individuals to detect critical signals in fetal heart rate (FHR) tracings in one
or more displays over an extended period of time. Seventy-two participants monitored
one, two, or four computer-simulated FHR tracings on a computer display for the appearance
of late decelerations over a 48-minute vigil. Measures of subjective stress and workload
were also obtained before and after the vigil. The results showed that detection accuracy
decreased over time and also declined as the number of displays increased. The subjective
reports indicated that participants found the task to be stressful and mentally demanding,
effortful, and frustrating. The results suggest that centralized monitoring that allows
many patients to be monitored simultaneously may impose a detrimental attentional
burden on the observer. Furthermore, this seemingly benign task may impose an additional
source of stress and mental workload above what is commonly found in labor and delivery
units.
KEYWORDS
Fetal heart rate - multiple displays - signal detection - stress - workload
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Mark W ScerboPh.D.
Department of Psychology, Old Dominion University
Norfolk, VA 23529-0267
eMail: mscerbo@odu.edu