Kim George R, Bartlett Edward L, Lehmann Harold P
Division of Health Sciences Informatics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2005 Oct 14;5:34. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-5-34.
Information needs and resource preferences of office-based general pediatricians have not been well characterized.
Data collected from a sample of twenty office-based urban/suburban general pediatricians consisted of: (a) a demographic survey about participants' practice and computer use, (b) semi-structured interviews on their use of different types of information resources and (c) semi-structured interviews on perceptions of information needs and resource preferences in response to clinical vignettes representing cases in Genetics and Infectious Diseases. Content analysis of interviews provided participants' perceived use of resources and their perceived questions and preferred resources in response to vignettes.
Participants' average time in practice was 15.4 years (2-28 years). All had in-office online access. Participants identified specialist/generalist colleagues, general/specialty pediatric texts, drug formularies, federal government/professional organization Websites and medical portals (when available) as preferred information sources. They did not identify decision-making texts, evidence-based reviews, journal abstracts, medical librarians or consumer health information for routine office use.In response to clinical vignettes in Genetics and Infectious Diseases, participants identified Question Types about patient-specific (diagnosis, history and findings) and general medical (diagnostic, therapeutic and referral guidelines) information. They identified specialists and specialty textbooks, history and physical examination, colleagues and general pediatric textbooks, and federal and professional organizational Websites as information sources. Participants with access to portals identified them as information resources in lieu of texts. For Genetics vignettes, participants identified questions about prenatal history, disease etiology and treatment guidelines. For Genetics vignettes, they identified patient history, specialists, general pediatric texts, Web search engines and colleagues as information sources. For Infectious Diseases (ID) vignettes, participants identified questions about patients' clinical status at presentation and questions about disease classification, diagnosis/therapy/referral guidelines and sources of patient education. For ID vignettes, they identified history, laboratory results, colleagues, specialists and personal experience as information sources.
Content analysis of office-based general pediatricians' responses to clinical vignettes provided a qualitative description of their perceptions of information needs and preferences for information resource for cases in Genetics and Infectious Diseases. This approach may provide complementary information for discovering practitioner's information needs and resource preferences in different contexts.
以门诊为基础的普通儿科医生的信息需求和资源偏好尚未得到充分描述。
从20名以门诊为基础的城市/郊区普通儿科医生样本中收集的数据包括:(a)关于参与者的执业情况和计算机使用情况的人口统计学调查,(b)关于他们使用不同类型信息资源的半结构化访谈,以及(c)关于对代表遗传学和传染病病例的临床案例的信息需求和资源偏好的半结构化访谈。对访谈进行内容分析,以了解参与者对资源的感知使用情况,以及他们针对案例所感知到的问题和偏好的资源。
参与者的平均执业时间为15.4年(2 - 28年)。所有人都能在办公室内上网。参与者将专科/全科同事、普通/专科儿科教材、药品处方集、联邦政府/专业组织网站以及医疗门户网站(如有)视为首选信息来源。他们未将决策性文本、循证综述、期刊摘要、医学图书馆员或消费者健康信息列为日常门诊使用的信息来源。针对遗传学和传染病的临床案例,参与者识别出有关患者特定(诊断、病史和检查结果)以及一般医学(诊断、治疗和转诊指南)信息的问题类型。他们将专科医生和专科教材、病史和体格检查、同事以及普通儿科教材,以及联邦和专业组织网站视为信息来源。能够访问门户网站的参与者将其视为替代教材的信息资源。对于遗传学案例,参与者识别出有关产前病史、疾病病因和治疗指南的问题。对于遗传学案例,他们将患者病史、专科医生、普通儿科教材、网络搜索引擎和同事视为信息来源。对于传染病(ID)案例,参与者识别出有关患者就诊时临床状况的问题,以及有关疾病分类、诊断/治疗/转诊指南和患者教育来源的问题。对于ID案例,他们将病史、实验室检查结果、同事、专科医生和个人经验视为信息来源。
对以门诊为基础的普通儿科医生对临床案例的回应进行内容分析,定性描述了他们对遗传学和传染病案例的信息需求以及信息资源偏好。这种方法可能为发现不同背景下从业者的信息需求和资源偏好提供补充信息。