Lung Cancer Lab Software Design

Quick Note: I’ve been asked not to show any flows or additional screens as these are very proprietary software designs that the company would prefer I not share publicly.

Overview

While at Lightmatter, I had the opportunity to work with a laboratory that in short, is able to detect lung cancer in smoking patients via blood samples. We spent over 6 months defining and redefining the interface from scratch to be able to handle the entire processing of the blood samples from creating the original orders on the providers’ ends all the way to reporting results back to the patients.


The Challenges

Given there was such a wide variety of requirements by so many different teams software, the biggest challenge was creating a interface that was simple and clean, but powerful enough to handle everything they needed as they did not want to use disparate softwares for each team.


The list below encompasses the range of features that I was able to deliver:.

  • High Level

    • Overview of blood sample progress through system with legal requirement for very granular audits

    • Ability to move orders from step to step until order is complete

    • Communication and messaging across teams (via ‘conversations’)

    • Information error management via case creation (see right panel)

    • Provider and patient indexes with search and filtering

    • Uploads section for any documents/images

  • Ordering

    • Ability for Doctors to submit blood work prescription to phlebotomist on behalf of patient

    • Insurance & billing capture

    • Edibility of patient information per section/across all sections (see global edit toggle in bottom left)

    • Barcode creation modal for blood sample identification

  • Lab intake

    • Intake of blood samples including barcode scanning and sample

    • Error tracking and resolution (broken test tubes, dried samples, etc…)

  • Sample Processing

    • Quality Control metrics visualization to compare sample results to baseline

    • Ability to create holds on samples in cases of potentially faulty data

    • Data visualization tools and sample grouping (blood sample grouping is extremely tedious and detailed!)

  • Reporting

    • Ability to create and send results to patients and providers

    • Error management and resolution in reporting


This list above, along with testing across each and every team via clickable prototypes and flows, while receiving input from 30+ members of the company’s team was an added challenge. That said, this was hands-down one of my favorite projects given the complexity and problem-solving.


The outcome

I worked in tandem with the engineering team to essentially develop the application in real time. The timeline was extremely short for the list of ever-growing requirements, but after 6 months, the software was already built and functioning based on my designs. I was also able to deliver a full software design guideline along with templates for any future requirements they may have come across. I spoke with their team recently and it sounds like they are still using the designs I’ve created and have used my guidelines to build more features into their pipeline.


My Takeaway

My experience in branding and visual design, including icons, logos, websites, and marketing materials, has been incredibly rewarding. I've seen my work featured on NYC Subway ads, prominent billboards, and even in Google's early icon collection.


This project helped me find an deeper interest for complex, multi-dimensional problem-solving that demands collaboration with bigger teams. I’m very proud of the work we did in delivering a solid foundation for the company to grow with.

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