Dental Informatics Core, Indiana University School of Dentistry, 1121 W Michigan Street, S316, Indianapolis, IN, USA; Center for Biomedical Informatics, Regenstrief Institute, Inc., 410 West 10th Street, Suite 2000, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
Office of Faculty Affairs, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Int J Med Inform. 2014 Apr;83(4):292-302. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2014.01.007. Epub 2014 Jan 20.
Despite many decades of research on the effective development of clinical systems in medicine, the adoption of health information technology to improve patient care continues to be slow, especially in ambulatory settings. This applies to dentistry as well, a primary care discipline with approximately 137,000 practitioners in the United States. A critical reason for slow adoption is the poor usability of clinical systems, which makes it difficult for providers to navigate through the information and obtain an integrated view of patient data.
In this study, we documented the cognitive processes and information management strategies used by dentists during a typical patient examination. The results will inform the design of a novel electronic dental record interface.
We conducted a cognitive task analysis (CTA) study to observe ten general dentists (five general dentists and five general dental faculty members, each with more than two years of clinical experience) examining three simulated patient cases using a think-aloud protocol.
Dentists first reviewed the patient's demographics, chief complaint, medical history and dental history to determine the general status of the patient. Subsequently, they proceeded to examine the patient's intraoral status using radiographs, intraoral images, hard tissue and periodontal tissue information. The results also identified dentists' patterns of navigation through patient's information and additional information needs during a typical clinician-patient encounter.
This study reinforced the significance of applying cognitive engineering methods to inform the design of a clinical system. Second, applying CTA to a scenario closely simulating an actual patient encounter helped with capturing participants' knowledge states and decision-making when diagnosing and treating a patient. The resultant knowledge of dentists' patterns of information retrieval and review will significantly contribute to designing flexible and task-appropriate information presentation in electronic dental records.
尽管医学领域对临床系统的有效开发进行了几十年的研究,但医疗信息技术在改善患者护理方面的应用仍然缓慢,尤其是在门诊环境中。这同样适用于牙科,美国有大约 137,000 名从业者的初级保健学科。采用速度缓慢的一个关键原因是临床系统的可用性差,这使得提供者难以浏览信息并获得患者数据的综合视图。
在这项研究中,我们记录了牙医在典型患者检查过程中使用的认知过程和信息管理策略。研究结果将为新型电子牙科记录界面的设计提供信息。
我们进行了一项认知任务分析(CTA)研究,观察了十名普通牙医(五名普通牙医和五名普通牙科教师,每位都有两年以上的临床经验)使用出声思维协议检查三个模拟患者病例。
牙医首先查看患者的人口统计学信息、主诉、病史和牙科病史,以确定患者的一般状况。随后,他们使用 X 光片、口腔内图像、硬组织和牙周组织信息来检查患者的口腔内状况。研究结果还确定了牙医在典型医患就诊过程中浏览患者信息和其他信息需求的模式。
这项研究强化了将认知工程方法应用于临床系统设计的重要性。其次,将 CTA 应用于紧密模拟实际患者就诊情况的场景有助于捕获参与者在诊断和治疗患者时的知识状态和决策过程。牙医信息检索和审查模式的知识将极大地有助于设计电子牙科记录中的灵活和任务适当的信息呈现。