Center for Health Information and Communication, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Health Services Research and Development Service CIN 13-416, Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center, 1481 W 10th St., Indianapolis, IN, 46202, United States; Purdue School of Engineering and Technology, IUPUI, 799 W Michigan St., Indianapolis, IN, 46202, United States; Indiana University Center for Health Services and Outcomes Research, 1101 W. 10thSt., Indianapolis, IN, 46202, United States; Regenstrief Institute, Inc., 1101 W. 10thSt., Indianapolis, IN, 46202, United States.
Applied Decision Science, LLC, 1776 Mentor Ave # 424, Cincinnati, OH, 45212, United States.
Int J Med Inform. 2019 Sep;129:88-94. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2019.05.027. Epub 2019 May 31.
This study sought to identify and describe the cognitive requirements and associated information needs of referring primary care providers (PCPs) during the referral process as well as characterize referring PCPs' experiences with current health information technology.
We interviewed 62 referring PCPs. Our four-member analysis team used hierarchical task analysis to construct a goal-directed hierarchy. We utilized extensions of the task analysis to describe PCPs' common experiences with health information technologies throughout the referral process.
The resultant goal hierarchy includes one main goal (Referral for Additional Care), two sub-goals (Assess Patient's Condition and Manage Referrals), and four major tasks with respective decisions (What consultation is warranted; What information should I provide; What additional action is needed; and How to integrate specialists' findings). Approximately 22 information needs were commonly identified and PCPs described their use of various sources - other PCPs, electronic health records, chat software, and paper- to satisfy those information needs.
Cognitive demand for referring PCPs is high throughout the referral process. They have to search, identify, compose, track, and integrate information across multiple screens, systems, and people. Existing interfaces do not adequately support the communication, information exchange, or care coordination related to the referral process. Results from this study provide an important foundation for developing patient-centered displays that support PCPs' decision-making process and reduce cognitive challenges.
本研究旨在确定和描述转诊初级保健提供者(PCP)在转诊过程中的认知需求和相关信息需求,并描述转诊 PCP 对当前健康信息技术的体验。
我们采访了 62 名转诊 PCP。我们的四人分析团队使用层次任务分析构建了一个目标导向的层次结构。我们利用任务分析的扩展来描述 PCP 在整个转诊过程中使用健康信息技术的常见体验。
最终的目标层次结构包括一个主要目标(转诊以获得额外的医疗服务)、两个子目标(评估患者的病情和管理转诊)以及四个具有各自决策的主要任务(需要何种咨询;我应该提供哪些信息;需要采取哪些额外的行动;以及如何整合专家的发现)。大约有 22 个常见的信息需求被确定,PCP 描述了他们使用各种来源(其他 PCP、电子健康记录、聊天软件和纸质文件)来满足这些信息需求。
在整个转诊过程中,转诊 PCP 的认知需求很高。他们必须在多个屏幕、系统和人员之间搜索、识别、组合、跟踪和整合信息。现有的界面不能充分支持与转诊过程相关的沟通、信息交换或护理协调。本研究的结果为开发以患者为中心的显示界面提供了重要基础,这些界面可以支持 PCP 的决策过程并减少认知挑战。