Ray Jessica M, Ahmed Osama M, Solad Yauheni, Maleska Matthew, Martel Shara, Jeffery Molly M, Platts-Mills Timothy F, Hess Erik P, D'Onofrio Gail, Melnick Edward R
Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States.
Yale New Haven Health, New Haven, CT, United States.
JMIR Hum Factors. 2019 Feb 27;6(1):e13121. doi: 10.2196/13121.
Emergency departments (EDs) frequently care for individuals with opioid use disorder (OUD). Buprenorphine (BUP) is an effective treatment option for patients with OUD that can safely be initiated in the ED. At present, BUP is rarely initiated as a part of routine ED care. Clinical decision support (CDS) could accelerate adoption of ED-initiated BUP into routine emergency care.
This study aimed to design and formatively evaluate a user-centered decision support tool for ED initiation of BUP for patients with OUD.
User-centered design with iterative prototype development was used. Initial observations and interviews identified workflows and information needs. The design team and key stakeholders reviewed prototype designs to ensure accuracy. A total of 5 prototypes were evaluated and iteratively refined based on input from 26 attending and resident physicians.
Early feedback identified concerns with the initial CDS design: an alert with several screens. The timing of the alert led to quick dismissal without using the tool. User feedback on subsequent iterations informed the development of a flexible tool to support clinicians with varied levels of experience with the intervention by providing both one-click options for direct activation of care pathways and user-activated support for critical decision points. The final design resolved challenging navigation issues through targeted placement, color, and design of the decision support modules and care pathways. In final testing, users expressed that the tool could be easily learned without training and was reasonable for use during routine emergency care.
A user-centered design process helped designers to better understand users' needs for a Web-based clinical decision tool to support ED initiation of BUP for OUD. The process identified varying needs across user experience and familiarity with the protocol, leading to a flexible design supporting both direct care pathways and user-initiated decision support.
急诊科经常诊治患有阿片类物质使用障碍(OUD)的患者。丁丙诺啡(BUP)是治疗OUD患者的一种有效选择,可在急诊科安全启动使用。目前,BUP很少作为急诊科常规护理的一部分启动使用。临床决策支持(CDS)可以加速将急诊科启动的BUP纳入常规急诊护理。
本研究旨在设计并形成性评估一种以用户为中心的决策支持工具,用于急诊科为OUD患者启动BUP治疗。
采用以用户为中心的设计并进行迭代式原型开发。初始观察和访谈确定了工作流程和信息需求。设计团队和关键利益相关者对原型设计进行了审查,以确保准确性。根据26位主治医师和住院医师的意见,对总共5个原型进行了评估并进行了迭代完善。
早期反馈发现了对初始CDS设计的担忧:一个包含多个屏幕的警报。警报的时机导致其在未被使用的情况下就被迅速忽略。后续迭代过程中的用户反馈促使开发了一种灵活的工具,通过提供一键激活护理路径的选项以及针对关键决策点的用户激活支持,为具有不同干预经验水平的临床医生提供支持。最终设计通过决策支持模块和护理路径的有针对性布局、颜色和设计解决了具有挑战性的导航问题。在最终测试中,用户表示该工具无需培训即可轻松学会,并且在常规急诊护理期间使用是合理的。
以用户为中心的设计过程帮助设计师更好地了解用户对基于网络的临床决策工具的需求,以支持急诊科为OUD患者启动BUP治疗。该过程确定了不同用户体验和对方案熟悉程度的不同需求,从而形成了一种灵活的设计,既支持直接护理路径,也支持用户发起的决策支持。