Department of Neurological Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
McKelvey School of Engineering, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
Appl Clin Inform. 2022 Mar;13(2):456-467. doi: 10.1055/s-0042-1745829. Epub 2022 Apr 27.
The Kids Intracranial Injury Decision Support tool for Traumatic Brain Injury (KIIDS-TBI) tool is a validated risk prediction model for managing children with mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBI) and intracranial injuries. Electronic clinical decision support (CDS) may facilitate the clinical implementation of this evidence-based guidance.
Our objective was to evaluate the acceptability and usability of an electronic CDS tool for managing children with mTBI and intracranial injuries.
Emergency medicine and neurosurgery physicians (10 each) from 10 hospitals in the United States were recruited to participate in usability testing of a novel CDS prototype in a simulated electronic health record environment. Testing included a think-aloud protocol, an acceptability and usability survey, and a semi-structured interview. The prototype was updated twice during testing to reflect user feedback. Usability problems recorded in the videos were categorized using content analysis. Interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis.
Among the 20 participants, most worked at teaching hospitals (80%), freestanding children's hospitals (95%), and level-1 trauma centers (75%). During the two prototype updates, problems with clarity of terminology and navigating through the CDS interface were identified and corrected. Corresponding to these changes, the number of usability problems decreased from 35 in phase 1 to 8 in phase 3 and the number of mistakes made decreased from 18 (phase 1) to 2 (phase 3). Through the survey, participants found the tool easy to use (90%), useful for determining a patient's level of care (95%), and likely to improve resource use (90%) and patient safety (79%). Interview themes related to the CDS's ability to support evidence-based decision-making and improve clinical workflow proposed implementation strategies and potential pitfalls.
After iterative evaluation and refinement, the KIIDS-TBI CDS tool was found to be highly usable and useful for aiding the management of children with mTBI and intracranial injuries.
儿童颅内损伤决策支持工具(KIIDS-TBI)是一种用于管理儿童轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)和颅内损伤的验证风险预测模型。电子临床决策支持(CDS)可能有助于将这一基于证据的指南付诸临床实践。
我们的目的是评估一种用于管理儿童 mTBI 和颅内损伤的电子 CDS 工具的可接受性和可用性。
从美国 10 家医院招募了 10 名急诊医学和神经外科医生,让他们在模拟电子健康记录环境中对一个新的 CDS 原型进行可用性测试。测试包括出声思维协议、可接受性和可用性调查以及半结构化访谈。在测试过程中,根据用户反馈对原型进行了两次更新。使用内容分析法对视频中记录的可用性问题进行分类。使用主题分析法对访谈记录进行分析。
在 20 名参与者中,大多数人在教学医院(80%)、独立儿童医院(95%)和一级创伤中心(75%)工作。在两个原型更新过程中,确定并纠正了术语表述不清和在 CDS 界面中导航的问题。与这些变化相对应,可用性问题的数量从第 1 阶段的 35 个减少到第 3 阶段的 8 个,错误数量从第 1 阶段的 18 个减少到第 3 阶段的 2 个。通过调查,参与者发现该工具易于使用(90%)、有助于确定患者的护理水平(95%),并且可能改善资源利用(90%)和患者安全(79%)。与 CDS 支持基于证据的决策制定和改善临床工作流程的能力相关的访谈主题提出了实施策略和潜在的陷阱。
经过反复评估和改进,KIIDS-TBI CDS 工具被发现非常易于使用且对帮助管理儿童 mTBI 和颅内损伤非常有用。