Mobile electronic health data platforms play a critical role in modern healthcare workflows, supporting clinical documentation, medication management, and patient communication. However, accessibility limitations in these systems continue to create challenges for clinicians with visual, motor, and cognitive impairments. Many healthcare interfaces prioritize workflow speed and information density over accessibility, increasing interaction complexity and potential patient safety risks. This paper presents an accessibility optimization framework for mobile electronic health data platforms using adaptive interface techniques and workflow-aware accessibility modeling. The proposed framework includes dynamic contrast enhancement, voice-assisted annotation, and guided workflow navigation to improve usability across clinical tasks. Controlled evaluations involving clinicians with functional limitations demonstrate improved task completion rates, reduced workflow errors, and lower safety-critical interaction delays compared to standard electronic health interfaces. The results show that accessibility optimization in mobile healthcare data systems improves not only usability, but also clinical efficiency and patient safety in healthcare environments.
Saksena et al. (Sat,) studied this question.