Secor Andrew M, Justafort John, Torrilus Chenet, Honoré Jean, Kiche Sharon, Sandifer Tracy K, Beima-Sofie Kristin, Wagner Anjuli D, Pintye Jillian, Puttkammer Nancy
Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Centre Haïtien pour le Renforcement du Système de Santé (CHARESS), Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Health Policy Technol. 2024 Aug;13(3). doi: 10.1016/j.hlpt.2024.100880. Epub 2024 Jun 5.
Clinical decision support (CDS) tools can support HIV care, including through case tracking, treatment and medication monitoring, and promoting provider compliance with care guidelines. There has been limited research into the technical, organizational, and behavioral factors that impact perceptions of and willingness to use CDS tools at scale in resource-limited settings, including in Haiti.
Our sample included fifteen purposively chosen Haitian HIV program experts, including active clinicians and HIV program managers. Participants completed structured quantitative surveys and one-on-one qualitative semi-structured interviews.
Study participants had high levels of familiarity and experience with CDS tools. The primary motivator for CDS tool use was a perceived benefit to quality of care, including improved provider time use, efficiency, and decision-making ability, and patient outcomes. Participants highlighted decision-making autonomy and how CDS tools could support provider decision making but should not supplant provider knowledge and experience. Participants highlighted the need for sufficient provider training/sensitization, inclusion of providers in the system design process, and prioritization of tool user-friendliness as key mechanisms to drive tool use and impact. Some participants noted that systemic issues, such as limited laboratory capacity, may reduce the usefulness of CDS alerts, particularly concerning differentiated care and priority viral load testing.
Respondents had largely positive perceptions of EMRs and CDS tools, particularly due to perceived improvements in quality of care. To improve tool use, stakeholders should prioritize tool user-friendliness and provider training. Addressing systemic health system issues is necessary to unlock the full potential of these tools.
临床决策支持(CDS)工具可以为艾滋病护理提供支持,包括病例跟踪、治疗和药物监测,以及促使医疗服务提供者遵守护理指南。对于在资源有限的环境中(包括在海地)大规模影响对CDS工具的认知和使用意愿的技术、组织和行为因素,相关研究一直有限。
我们的样本包括15名经过有目的挑选的海地艾滋病项目专家,其中有在职临床医生和艾滋病项目管理人员。参与者完成了结构化定量调查和一对一的定性半结构化访谈。
研究参与者对CDS工具有较高的熟悉度和使用经验。使用CDS工具的主要动机是认为其对护理质量有益,包括提高医疗服务提供者的时间利用效率、工作效率和决策能力,以及改善患者治疗效果。参与者强调了决策自主权,以及CDS工具如何能够支持医疗服务提供者的决策,但不应取代他们的知识和经验。参与者强调,需要为医疗服务提供者提供充分的培训/宣传,让他们参与系统设计过程,并将工具的用户友好性作为推动工具使用和产生影响的关键机制。一些参与者指出,诸如实验室能力有限等系统性问题可能会降低CDS警报的有用性,特别是在差异化护理和优先进行病毒载量检测方面。
受访者对电子病历和CDS工具的看法大多是积极的,特别是因为他们认为护理质量有所提高。为了提高工具的使用,利益相关者应优先考虑工具的用户友好性和医疗服务提供者培训。解决系统性卫生系统问题对于充分发挥这些工具的潜力是必要的。