The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Clinical Epidemiology, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
University of Ottawa, Department of Emergency Medicine, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2020 Jan 29;8(1):e15503. doi: 10.2196/15503.
The Canadian CT Head Rule (CCHR), the Canadian Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) Score, and the Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH) Rule have all previously demonstrated the potential to significantly standardize care and improve the management of patients in emergency departments (EDs). On the basis of user feedback, we believe that the addition of these rules to the Ottawa Rules App has the potential to increase the app's usability and user acceptability.
This study aimed to evaluate the perceived usefulness, acceptability, and uptake of the enhanced Ottawa Rules App (which now includes CCHR, TIA, and SAH Rules) among ED clinicians (medical students, residents, nurses, and physicians).
The enhanced Ottawa Rules App was publicly released for free on iOS and Android operating systems in November 2018. This study was conducted across 2 tertiary EDs in Ottawa, Canada. Posters, direct enrollment, snowball sampling, and emails were used for study recruitment. A 24-question Web-based survey was administered to participants via email, and this was used to determine user acceptability of the app and Technology Readiness Index (TRI) scores. In-app user analytics were collected to track user behavior, such as the number of app sessions, length of app sessions, frequency of rule use, and the date app was first opened.
A total of 77 ED clinicians completed the study, including 34 nurses, 12 residents, 14 physicians, and 17 medical students completing ED rotations. The median TRI score for this group was 3.38, indicating a higher than average propensity to embrace and adopt new technologies to accomplish goals in their work or daily lives. The majority of respondents agreed or strongly agreed that the app helped participants accurately carry out the clinical rules (56/77, 73%) and that they would recommend this app to their colleagues (64/77, 83%). Feedback from study participants suggested further expansion of the app-more clinical decision rules (CDRs) and different versions of the app tailored to the clinician role. Analysis and comparison of Google Analytics data and in-app data revealed similar usage behavior among study-enrolled users and all app users globally.
This study provides evidence that using the Ottawa Rules App (version 3.0.2) to improve and guide patient care would be feasible and widely accepted. The ability to verify self-reported user data (via a Web-based survey) against server analytics data is a notable strength of this study. Participants' continued app use and request for the addition of more CDRs warrant the further development of this app and call for additional studies to evaluate its feasibility and usability in different settings as well as assessment of clinical impact.
加拿大 CT 头部规则(CCHR)、加拿大短暂性脑缺血发作(TIA)评分和蛛网膜下腔出血(SAH)规则都已证明可以显著规范护理并改善急诊科(ED)患者的管理。基于用户反馈,我们相信将这些规则添加到渥太华规则应用程序中有可能提高应用程序的可用性和用户接受度。
本研究旨在评估增强的渥太华规则应用程序(现在包括 CCHR、TIA 和 SAH 规则)在 ED 临床医生(医学生、住院医师、护士和医生)中的感知有用性、可接受性和采用率。
增强的渥太华规则应用程序于 2018 年 11 月在 iOS 和 Android 操作系统上免费公开发布。这项研究在加拿大渥太华的 2 家三级 ED 进行。海报、直接注册、滚雪球抽样和电子邮件用于研究招募。通过电子邮件向参与者发送了一份包含 24 个问题的网络调查,用于确定应用程序的用户接受度和技术准备指数(TRI)得分。收集应用内用户分析数据来跟踪用户行为,例如应用程序会话的次数、应用程序会话的长度、规则使用的频率以及首次打开应用程序的日期。
共有 77 名 ED 临床医生完成了这项研究,包括 34 名护士、12 名住院医师、14 名医生和 17 名正在接受 ED 轮转的医学生。该组的中位数 TRI 评分为 3.38,表明他们比平均水平更倾向于接受和采用新技术来完成工作或日常生活中的目标。大多数受访者同意或强烈同意该应用程序帮助参与者准确执行临床规则(77 人中的 56 人,73%),并且他们会向同事推荐该应用程序(77 人中的 64 人,83%)。研究参与者的反馈表明,需要进一步扩展该应用程序——更多的临床决策规则(CDRs)和针对临床医生角色的不同版本的应用程序。对 Google Analytics 数据和应用内数据的分析和比较显示,研究参与者和全球所有应用程序用户的使用行为相似。
本研究提供的证据表明,使用渥太华规则应用程序(版本 3.0.2)来改善和指导患者护理是可行且广泛接受的。能够通过基于网络的调查来验证自我报告的用户数据(通过基于网络的调查)与服务器分析数据的一致性,是这项研究的一个显著优势。参与者持续使用该应用程序并要求添加更多 CDR,这证明了该应用程序的进一步开发是合理的,并呼吁在不同环境中进一步评估其可行性和可用性,以及评估其对临床的影响。