Redwood Sabi, Ngwenya Nothando B, Hodson James, Ferner Robin E, Coleman Jamie J
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2013 Jun 4;13:63. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-13-63.
The behaviour of doctors and their responses to warnings can inform the effective design of Clinical Decision Support Systems. We used data from a University hospital electronic prescribing and laboratory reporting system with hierarchical warnings and alerts to explore junior doctors' behaviour. The objective of this trial was to establish whether a Junior Doctor Dashboard providing feedback on prescription warning information and laboratory alerting acceptance rates was effective in changing junior doctors' behaviour.
A mixed methods approach was employed which included a parallel group randomised controlled trial, and individual and focus group interviews. Junior doctors below the specialty trainee level 3 grade were recruited and randomised to two groups. Every doctor (N = 42) in the intervention group was e-mailed a link to a personal dashboard every week for 4 months. Nineteen participated in interviews. The 44 control doctors did not receive any automated feedback. The outcome measures were the difference in responses to prescribing warnings (of two severities) and laboratory alerting (of two severities) between the months before and the months during the intervention, analysed as the difference in performance between the intervention and the control groups.
No significant differences were observed in the rates of generating prescription warnings, or in the acceptance of laboratory alarms. However, responses to laboratory alerts differed between the pre-intervention and intervention periods. For the doctors of Foundation Year 1 grade, this improvement was significantly (p = 0.002) greater in the group with access to the dashboard (53.6% ignored pre-intervention compared to 29.2% post intervention) than in the control group (47.9% ignored pre-intervention compared to 47.0% post intervention). Qualitative interview data indicated that while junior doctors were positive about the electronic prescribing functions, they were discriminating in the way they responded to other alerts and warnings given that from their perspective these were not always immediately clinically relevant or within the scope of their responsibility.
We have only been able to provide weak evidence that a clinical dashboard providing individualized feedback data has the potential to improve safety behaviour and only in one of several domains. The construction of metrics used in clinical dashboards must take account of actual work processes.
ISRCTN72253051.
医生的行为及其对警告的反应可为临床决策支持系统的有效设计提供依据。我们利用一家大学医院电子处方和实验室报告系统的数据(该系统带有分级警告和警报)来探究初级医生的行为。本试验的目的是确定提供处方警告信息反馈和实验室警报接受率反馈的初级医生仪表盘是否能有效改变初级医生的行为。
采用了混合方法,包括平行组随机对照试验以及个人访谈和焦点小组访谈。招募了低于专科培训3级的初级医生并将其随机分为两组。干预组的每位医生(N = 42)在4个月内每周都会收到一封电子邮件,其中包含指向个人仪表盘的链接。19人参与了访谈。44名对照组医生未收到任何自动反馈。结果指标是干预前几个月与干预期间几个月对两种严重程度的处方警告和两种严重程度的实验室警报的反应差异,分析为干预组与对照组之间的表现差异。
在生成处方警告的比率或对实验室警报的接受方面未观察到显著差异。然而,干预前和干预期间对实验室警报的反应有所不同。对于一年级基础医生,能够访问仪表盘的组中这种改善(p = 0.002)显著更大(干预前53.6%忽略,干预后29.2%忽略),而对照组(干预前47.9%忽略,干预后47.0%忽略)。定性访谈数据表明,虽然初级医生对电子处方功能持积极态度,但他们对其他警报和警告的反应方式有所区别,因为从他们的角度来看,这些并不总是与临床直接相关或在其职责范围内。
我们仅能提供微弱证据表明提供个性化反馈数据的临床仪表盘有改善安全行为的潜力,且仅在几个领域之一。临床仪表盘中使用的指标构建必须考虑实际工作流程。
ISRCTN:ISRCTN72253051