Zazove Philip, Plegue Melissa A, Uhlmann Wendy R, Ruffin Mack T
From the Department of Family Medicine (PZ, MAP, MTR), the Division of Molecular Medicine and Genetics, Department of Internal Medicine (WRU), and the Department of Human Genetics (WRU), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
J Am Board Fam Med. 2015 May-Jun;28(3):334-42. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2015.03.140149.
Electronic health records have the potential to facilitate family history use by primary care physicians (PCPs) to provide personalized care. The objective of this study was to determine whether automated, at-the-visit tailored prompts about family history risk change PCP behavior.
Automated, tailored prompts highlighting familial risk for heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and breast, colorectal, or ovarian cancer were implemented during 2011 to 2012. Medical records of a cohort of community-based primary care patients, aged 35 to 65 years, who previously participated in our Family Healthware study and had a moderate or strong familial risk for any of the 6 diseases were subsequently reviewed. The main outcome measures were PCP response to the prompts, adding family history risk to problem summary lists, and patient screening status for each disease.
The 492 eligible patients had 847 visits during the study period; 152 visits had no documentation of response to a family history prompt. Of the remaining 695 visits, physician responses were reviewed family history (n = 372, 53.5%), discussed family history (n = 159, 22.9%), not addressed (n = 155, 22.3%), and reviewed family history and ordered tests/referrals (n = 5, 0.7%). There was no significant change in problem summary list documentation of risk status or screening interventions for any of the 6 diseases.
No change occurred upon instituting simple, at-the-visit family history prompts geared to improve PCPs' ability to identify patients at high risk for 6 common conditions. The results are both surprising and disappointing. Further studies should examine physicians' perception of the utility of prompts for family history risk.
电子健康记录有潜力促进初级保健医生(PCP)利用家族病史来提供个性化医疗服务。本研究的目的是确定关于家族病史风险的自动、就诊时定制提示是否会改变初级保健医生的行为。
在2011年至2012年期间实施了自动、定制提示,突出心脏病、中风、糖尿病以及乳腺癌、结直肠癌或卵巢癌的家族风险。随后对一组年龄在35至65岁之间、此前参与过我们的家庭健康软件研究且对这6种疾病中的任何一种有中度或高度家族风险的社区初级保健患者的病历进行了审查。主要结局指标是初级保健医生对提示的反应、将家族病史风险添加到问题总结列表中以及每种疾病的患者筛查状态。
在研究期间,492名符合条件的患者进行了847次就诊;152次就诊没有关于对家族病史提示反应的记录。在其余695次就诊中,医生的反应为查阅家族病史(n = 372,53.5%)、讨论家族病史(n = 159,22.9%)、未提及(n = 155,22.3%)以及查阅家族病史并安排检查/转诊(n = 5,0.7%)。对于这6种疾病中的任何一种,问题总结列表中风险状态的记录或筛查干预措施均无显著变化。
实施旨在提高初级保健医生识别6种常见疾病高危患者能力的简单、就诊时家族病史提示后,未发生变化。结果既令人惊讶又令人失望。进一步的研究应考察医生对家族病史风险提示效用的看法。