Friedman C P, Elstein A S, Wolf F M, Murphy G C, Franz T M, Heckerling P S, Fine P L, Miller T M, Abraham V
Center for Biomedical Informatics and Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
JAMA. 1999 Nov 17;282(19):1851-6. doi: 10.1001/jama.282.19.1851.
Computer-based diagnostic decision support systems (DSSs) were developed to improve health care quality by providing accurate, useful, and timely diagnostic information to clinicians. However, most studies have emphasized the accuracy of the computer system alone, without placing clinicians in the role of direct users.
To explore the extent to which consultations with DSSs improve clinicians' diagnostic hypotheses in a set of diagnostically challenging cases.
Partially randomized controlled trial conducted in a laboratory setting, using a prospective balanced experimental design in 1995-1998.
Three academic medical centers, none of which were involved in the development of the DSSs.
A total of 216 physicians: 72 at each site, including 24 internal medicine faculty members, 24 senior residents, and 24 fourth-year medical students. One physician's data were lost to analysis.
Two DSSs, ILIAD (version 4.2) and Quick Medical Reference (QMR; version 3.7.1), were used by participants for diagnostic evaluation of a total of 36 cases based on actual patients. After training, each subject evaluated 9 of the 36 cases, first without and then using a DSS, and suggested an ordered list of diagnostic hypotheses after each evaluation.
Diagnostic accuracy, measured as the presence of the correct diagnosis on the hypothesis list and also using a derived diagnostic quality score, before and after consultation with the DSSs.
Correct diagnoses appeared in subjects' hypothesis lists for 39.5% of cases prior to consultation and 45.4% of cases after consultation. Subjects' mean diagnostic quality scores increased from 5.7 (95% confidence interval [CI], 5.5-5.9) to 6.1 (95% CI, 5.9-6.3) (effect size: Cohen d = 0.32; 95% CI, 0.23-0.41; P<.001). Larger increases (P = .048) were observed for students than for residents and faculty. Effect size varied significantly (P<.02) by DSS (Cohen d = 0.20; 95% CI, 0.08-0.32 for ILIAD vs Cohen d = 0.45; 95% CI, 0.31-0.59 for QMR).
Our study supports the idea that "hands-on" use of diagnostic DSSs can influence diagnostic reasoning of clinicians. The larger effect for students suggests a possible educational role for these systems.
基于计算机的诊断决策支持系统(DSS)旨在通过向临床医生提供准确、有用且及时的诊断信息来提高医疗质量。然而,大多数研究仅强调计算机系统本身的准确性,并未将临床医生置于直接用户的角色。
探讨在一系列具有诊断挑战性的病例中,与DSS进行会诊在多大程度上能改善临床医生的诊断假设。
1995 - 1998年在实验室环境中进行的部分随机对照试验,采用前瞻性平衡实验设计。
三个学术医疗中心,均未参与DSS的开发。
共216名医生,每个地点72名,包括24名内科教员、24名高级住院医师和24名四年级医学生。有一名医生的数据丢失无法进行分析。
参与者使用两个DSS,即ILLIAD(4.2版)和快速医学参考(QMR;3.7.1版),对基于实际患者的总共36个病例进行诊断评估。经过培训后,每个受试者对36个病例中的9个进行评估,先是不使用DSS,然后使用DSS,并在每次评估后提出一份按顺序排列的诊断假设清单。
在与DSS会诊前后,以假设清单上是否存在正确诊断以及使用推导的诊断质量评分来衡量诊断准确性。
在会诊前,39.5%的病例中正确诊断出现在受试者的假设清单中;会诊后,这一比例为45.4%。受试者的平均诊断质量评分从5.7(95%置信区间[CI],5.5 - 5.9)提高到6.1(95%CI,5.9 - 6.3)(效应大小:科恩d = 0.32;95%CI,0.23 - 0.41;P <.001)。学生的提高幅度(P = 0.048)大于住院医师和教员。不同DSS的效应大小差异显著(P <.02)(ILLIAD的科恩d = 0.20;95%CI,0.08 - 0.32,而QMR的科恩d = 0.45;95%CI,0.31 - 0.59)。
我们的研究支持“实际操作”使用诊断DSS可影响临床医生诊断推理的观点。对学生的影响更大表明这些系统可能具有教育作用。