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Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman

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Page 1: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Guideline implementationTypes of CDSS

A.Hasman

Page 2: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Do physicians need support?

• In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors were made during their stay in a hospital in the Netherlands.

• About 10.000 patients suffered a permanent injury. This could have been prevented in 6.000 patients.

• For 4.1% of the 42.000 patients who died in the hospital death could have been prevented.

Page 3: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Conclusion

• Doctors are not infallible

• Support physicians and nurses both in repeating and difficult tasks

Page 4: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

How to support physicians and nurses?

• Easy access to the scientific literature

• Guidelines

• Computer-based diagnostic systems

Page 5: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Medical decision support

• Already available for years– ECG/EEG analysis (signal analysis and parameter

interpretation)– Diagnostic systems (cardiology (congenital heart

disease diagnosis), radiology (bone tumor classification))

– Radiotherapy planning– Medication selection, dosing– Clinical algorithms (flowcharts on paper, for nurses

and ancillary personnel)– Guidelines

Page 6: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

                                                                                                           

                                                                                                           

Page 7: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors
Page 8: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors
Page 9: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors
Page 10: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Methodology used by CDSS

– Decision trees– Statistical approaches

• Bayes’ rule• Discriminant analysis• Logistic regression

– Inference techniques• Rules• Logic• Semantic networks

– Etc.

Page 11: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Decision trees

BP lower than 140/90

Send patient home First visit?

YesNo

Yes No

Page 12: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

x

x

xx

x

x

x

O

O

O

O

O

O

O

x

xO

Var 1

Var 2

Page 13: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Bayes’ rule

P(Dj |Si ) = P(Dj) * P(Si|Dj)/P(Si)

P(Dj) prior probability of disease j (prevalence)

P(Si) probability of symptom i in population

P(Si|Dj) conditional probability (sensitivity or specificity))

P(Dj|Si) posterior probability (predictive value)

Page 14: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Types of decision support

• Passive– Physician actively searches in the knowledge

base for relevant information. Information indexed

• Active– System pro-actively provides physician with

relevant information– System re-actively provides physician with

relevant information

Page 15: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Guidelines

• Systematically developed statements to assist practitioner and patient decisions about appropriate healthcare for specific clinical circumstances

• They provide information for various types of patients having some common problem

• Provide a common standard of care both within a healthcare organization and among different organizations

• Based on consensus or evidence-based

Page 16: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Use of guidelines

• May lead to a reduction of errors, practice variability and patient care costs, while improving patient care

• Narrative guidelines usually population-based, not patient specific

• Healthcare organizations pay more attention to guideline development than to guideline implementation, evidently hoping

• That clinicians will simply familiarize themselves with published guidelines and then apply them appropriately during the care of patients

Page 17: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Background: paper-based guidelines

Page 18: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Problems with guidelines

• Guidelines often contain ambiguities, vague sentences and ‘open ends’

• Leads to different interpretations

• This limits the use of guidelines

Page 19: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Guideline Dissemination

• Assumption: Practitioners will read the guidelines

• Assumption: Practitioners will internalize and there after follow guidelines

• Reality: Physicians do not use the guidelines or do not use them correctly

Page 20: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors
Page 21: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Why was decision support not accepted?

• Decision support systems were only applied in the institution where they were developed, if at all

• Computer systems were stand-alone systems: no integration, so double data entry

• Computer systems were slow and expensive• Initially physicians did not accept guidelines or clinical

algorithms (Cookbook medicine, patients differ, useful for ancillary personnel)

• Because of current emphasis on quality of care (evidence based medicine) guidelines are becoming relevant

Page 22: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Myth-1

• Diagnosis is the dominant decision-making issue in medicine – Typical questions are not “What does this

patient have?” but, rather, “What should I do for this patient?

Ted Shortliffe

Page 23: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors
Page 24: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Myth-2

• Clinicians will use knowledge-based systems if the programs can be shown to function at the level of experts– What do we know about “expertise” and

the associated cognitive factors?

Page 25: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

The nature of clinical expertise• Tremendous variation in practice, even

among “experts”• Need to understand better how experts meld

personal heuristics and experience with data, and knowledge from the literature, in order to arrive at decisions (medical cognition)– Can we better teach such skills?– How could improved understanding affect the way

decision-support systems offer their advice or information?

– How will such insights affect our under-standing of clinicians as computer users?

Page 26: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Myth-3

• Clinicians will use stand-alone decision-support tools. – The death of the “Greek Oracle” model

→Integrated decision support in the context of routine workflow

Page 27: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Systematic review of Garg et al

• Systems that warn physicians have more effect on the physicians (success in 44/60 studies) than systems that have to be inititiated by physicians (17/36 studies)

• In the case of diagnostic systems 4 out 10 trials indicated that the use of a DSS leads to better results (an improvement for at least 50% of the the measured outcomes)

Page 28: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Reminder systems effective?

• For 16/21 trials concerning reminder systems for prevention using a DSS led to a better performance of the physicians (screening, test requests, drug prescription, etc.)

• Studies did not show a significant improvement in patient outcome

Page 29: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Computer interpretable guidelines

Page 30: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Computer-interpretable guidelines

• Guideline implementations best affect clinician behaviour if they deliver patient specific advice during patient encounters

• Computer-interpretable guidelines could provide such advice efficiently

• Computerized guideline systems are crucial elements in long-term strategies for promoting the use of guidelines (IOM)

Page 31: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Possibilities of ICT

• Computersystems can not only show guideline texts but can also reason with the information from the guideline. To do that information about an individual patient is necessary

• The combination of a formalized guideline and an EPR can lead to advice (pro-actively or reactively) concerning an individual patient

Page 32: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Medical Protocols

Page 33: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Methods and techniques20

Page 34: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

System description

Guideline Base

EPRExecution

engine

Knowledge Base

Guideline / Knowledge Base editor

Physician

Page 35: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

CIG ingredients

• Guideline model• Guideline expression language for expressing

decision criteria and eligibility criteria• Mapping of terminology in guideline to the

terminology used in EPR• Scheduling constraint specification language for

scheduling multiple steps• Guideline execution engine

Page 36: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Guideline modeling and representation

• System editor should provide– A domain ontology– A (visual) language for expressing the steps

in a guideline

Page 37: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Example: simple guideline

• Primitive: If … then

• Domain ontology: Digoxin, Potassium, …

If Digoxin and Potassium>3 mmol/l then “warning”

Page 38: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Phases in development process

• Select guideline to be formalized

• Formalize guideline

• Enter guideline into guideline system

• Guideline verification and testing

• Guideline execution

Page 39: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Acquiring guidelines

Page 40: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Acquiring guidelines

Page 41: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Acquiring guidelines

Page 42: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Acquiring guidelines

Page 43: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Acquiring guidelines5

Page 44: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Acquiring guidelines6

Page 45: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Complex guideline

• Primitives: Branch step, Synchronization step, Decision step, ….

• Domain ontology: Digoxin, ….

Page 46: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Guideline representation in GastonMode structure

Page 47: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Guideline representation in GastonMode structure

Page 48: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Guideline representation in GastonMode contents

Page 49: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors
Page 50: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

IS ~ GP

Evaluation module

Re-active decision support

KB

Request module

ICPC-module Reminder

No reminder

Page 51: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Reminder 1:A sinus X-ray is not adviced for children

younger than 10 years of age

Page 52: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors

Executing guidelines

Page 53: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors
Page 54: Guideline implementation Types of CDSS A.Hasman. Do physicians need support? In 2.3% of the 1.3 million patients (30.000 patients) preventable errors