Centre for Informed Health Choices, Division for Health Services, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Public Health and Primary Care, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Implement Sci. 2018 Aug 20;13(1):114. doi: 10.1186/s13012-018-0790-1.
Computerised clinical decision support (CDS) can potentially better inform decisions, and it can help with the management of information overload. It is perceived to be a key component of a learning health care system. Despite its increasing implementation worldwide, it remains uncertain why the effect of CDS varies and which factors make CDS more effective.
To examine which factors make CDS strategies more effective on a number of outcomes, including adherence to recommended practice, patient outcome measures, economic measures, provider or patient satisfaction, and medical decision quality.
We identified randomised controlled trials, non-randomised trials, and controlled before-and-after studies that directly compared CDS implementation with a given factor to CDS without that factor by searching CENTRAL, MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL and checking reference lists of relevant studies. We considered CDS with any objective for any condition in any healthcare setting. We included CDS interventions that were either displayed on screen or provided on paper and that were directed at healthcare professionals or targeted at both professionals and patients. The reviewers screened the potentially relevant studies in duplicate. They extracted data and assessed risk of bias in independent pairs or individually followed by a double check by another reviewer. We summarised results using medians and interquartile ranges and rated our certainty in the evidence using the GRADE system.
We identified 66 head-to-head trials that we synthesised across 14 comparisons of CDS intervention factors. Providing CDS automatically versus on demand led to large improvements in adherence. Displaying CDS on-screen versus on paper led to moderate improvements and making CDS more versus less patient-specific improved adherence modestly. When CDS interventions were combined with professional-oriented strategies, combined with patient-oriented strategies, or combined with staff-oriented strategies, then adherence improved slightly. Providing CDS to patients slightly increased adherence versus CDS aimed at the healthcare provider only. Making CDS advice more explicit and requiring users to respond to the advice made little or no difference. The CDS intervention factors made little or no difference to patient outcomes. The results for economic outcomes and satisfaction outcomes were sparse.
Multiple factors may affect the success of CDS interventions. CDS may be more effective when the advice is provided automatically and displayed on-screen and when the suggestions are more patient-specific. CDS interventions combined with other strategies probably also improves adherence. Providing CDS directly to patients may also positively affect adherence. The certainty of the evidence was low to moderate for all factors.
PROSPERO, CRD42016033738.
计算机化临床决策支持(CDS)可以更好地辅助决策,并有助于管理信息过载。它被认为是学习型医疗保健系统的关键组成部分。尽管它在全球范围内的应用日益广泛,但仍然不确定为什么 CDS 的效果会有所不同,以及哪些因素使 CDS 更有效。
研究哪些因素使 CDS 策略在多种结果上更有效,包括对推荐实践的依从性、患者结果指标、经济指标、提供者或患者满意度以及医疗决策质量。
我们通过搜索 CENTRAL、MEDLINE、EMBASE 和 CINAHL 并检查相关研究的参考文献列表,确定了直接比较 CDS 实施与给定因素的随机对照试验、非随机试验和对照前后研究,以及 CDS 实施与无该因素的 CDS 相比。我们考虑了在任何医疗保健环境中针对任何病症的任何目的的 CDS 干预措施。我们纳入了在屏幕上显示或提供纸质材料的 CDS 干预措施,并且针对医疗保健专业人员或针对专业人员和患者。审查员以重复的方式筛选潜在相关的研究。他们独立提取数据并评估风险偏倚,然后由另一名审查员进行双重检查。我们使用中位数和四分位距总结结果,并使用 GRADE 系统评估证据的确定性。
我们确定了 66 项头对头试验,我们在 14 项 CDS 干预因素比较中对这些试验进行了综合分析。与按需提供 CDS 相比,自动提供 CDS 可显著提高依从性。与纸质 CDS 相比,屏幕显示 CDS 可适度提高依从性,使 CDS 更具患者针对性可适度提高依从性。当 CDS 干预措施与面向专业人员的策略、面向患者的策略或面向员工的策略相结合时,依从性会略有提高。与仅针对医疗保健提供者的 CDS 相比,为患者提供 CDS 可略微提高依从性。使 CDS 建议更加明确并要求用户对建议做出回应,效果甚微或没有效果。CDS 干预因素对患者结局几乎没有影响。经济结果和满意度结果的证据稀少。
多个因素可能会影响 CDS 干预的效果。当建议自动提供且在屏幕上显示,以及建议更具患者针对性时,CDS 可能更有效。与其他策略相结合的 CDS 干预可能也会提高依从性。直接向患者提供 CDS 也可能对依从性产生积极影响。所有因素的证据确定性均为低到中等。
PROSPERO,CRD42016033738。