Gagliardi Anna R, Wright Frances C, Davis Dave, McLeod Robin S, Urbach David R
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2008 Dec 22;8:59. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-8-59.
While many factors can influence the way that cancer care is delivered, including the way that evidence is packaged and disseminated, little research has evaluated how health care professionals who manage cancer patients seek and use this information to identify whether and how this could be supported. Through interviews we identified that general surgeons experience challenges in coordinating care for complex cancer patients whose management is not easily addressed by guidelines, and conducted a population-based survey of general surgeon information needs and information seeking practices to extend these findings.
General surgeons with privileges at acute care hospitals in Ontario, Canada were mailed a questionnaire to solicit information needs (task, importance), information seeking (source, frequency of and reasons for use), key challenges and suggested solutions. Non-responders received up to three reminder packages. Significant differences among sub-groups (age, setting) were examined statistically (Kruskal Wallis, Mann Whitney, Chi Square). Standard qualitative methods were used to thematically analyze open-ended responses.
The response rate was 44.2% (170/385) representing all 14 health regions. System resource constraints (60.4%), comorbidities (56.4%) and physiologic factors (51.8%) were top-ranked issues creating information needs. Local surgical colleagues (84.6%), other local colleagues (82.2%) and the Internet (81.1%) were top-ranked sources of information, primarily due to familiarity and speed of access. No resources were considered to be highly applicable to patient care. Challenges were related to limitations in diagnostics and staging, operative resources, and systems to support multidisciplinary care, together accounting for 76.0% of all reported issues. Findings did not differ significantly by surgeon age or setting of care.
General surgeons appear to use a wide range of information resources but they may not address the complex needs of many cancer patients. Decision-making is challenged by informational and logistical issues related to the coordination of multidisciplinary care. This suggests that limitations in system capacity may, in part, contribute to variable guideline compliance. Further research is required to evaluate the appropriateness of information seeking, and both concurrent and consecutive mechanisms by which to achieve multidisciplinary care.
虽然许多因素会影响癌症护理的提供方式,包括证据的整理和传播方式,但很少有研究评估管理癌症患者的医护人员如何寻求和使用这些信息,以确定是否以及如何对此提供支持。通过访谈,我们发现普通外科医生在协调复杂癌症患者的护理方面面临挑战,这些患者的管理难以通过指南解决,因此我们对普通外科医生的信息需求和信息寻求行为进行了一项基于人群的调查,以扩展这些发现。
向在加拿大安大略省急症医院享有特权的普通外科医生邮寄问卷,以征求信息需求(任务、重要性)、信息寻求(来源、使用频率和原因)、主要挑战和建议解决方案。未回复者最多收到三个提醒包。对亚组(年龄、工作环境)之间的显著差异进行统计学检验(Kruskal Wallis检验、Mann Whitney检验、卡方检验)。使用标准定性方法对开放式回答进行主题分析。
回复率为44.2%(170/385),代表了所有14个健康区域。系统资源限制(60.4%)、合并症(56.4%)和生理因素(51.8%)是产生信息需求的首要问题。当地外科同事(84.6%)、其他当地同事(82.2%)和互联网(81.1%)是排名靠前的信息来源,主要是因为熟悉且获取速度快。没有资源被认为对患者护理非常适用。挑战与诊断和分期的局限性、手术资源以及支持多学科护理的系统有关,这些因素共占所有报告问题的76.0%。研究结果在外科医生年龄或护理环境方面没有显著差异。
普通外科医生似乎使用了广泛的信息资源,但可能无法满足许多癌症患者的复杂需求。与多学科护理协调相关的信息和后勤问题对决策构成了挑战。这表明系统能力的限制可能在一定程度上导致了指南依从性的差异。需要进一步研究来评估信息寻求的适当性,以及实现多学科护理的并行和连续机制。