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The influence of 'Tall Man' lettering on errors of visual perception in the recognition of written drug names

journal contribution
posted on 2014-07-30, 13:45 authored by Iain T. Darker, David Gerret, Ruth Filik, Kevin Purdy, Alastair Gale
Visual errors in the perception of written drug names can reflect orthographic similarity amongst certain names. Drug names are typically printed in lowercase text. ‘Tall Man’ lettering, the capitalisation of the portions that differ amongst orthographically similar drug names, is employed in the field of medication labelling and prescribing to reduce medication errors by highlighting the area most likely to prevent confusion. The influence of textual format on visual drug name perception was tested amongst healthcare professionals (n = 133) using the Reicher-Wheeler task. Relative to lowercase text, Tall Man lettering improved accuracy in drug name perception. However, an equivalent improvement in accuracy was obtained using entirely uppercase text. Thus, character size may be a key determinant of perceptual accuracy for Tall Man lettering. Specific considerations for the manner in which Tall Man lettering might be best formatted and implemented in practice to reduce medication errors are discussed.

History

School

  • Science

Department

  • Computer Science

Published in

ERGONOMICS

Volume

54

Issue

1

Pages

21 - 33 (13)

Citation

DARKER, I.T. ... et al, 2011. The influence of 'Tall Man' lettering on errors of visual perception in the recognition of written drug names. Ergonomics, 54 (1), pp. 21 - 33.

Publisher

© Taylor and Francis

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Publication date

2011

Notes

This article is closed access.

ISSN

0014-0139

Language

  • en