Modeling information flows in clinical decision support: key insights for enhancing system effectiveness
Modeling information flows in clinical decision support: key insights for enhancing system effectiveness
A fundamental challenge in the field of clinical decision support is to determine what characteristics of systems make them effective in supporting particular types of clinical decisions. However, we lack such a theory of decision support itself and a model to describe clinical decisions and the systems to support them. This article outlines such a framework. We present a two-stream model of information flow within clinical decision-support systems (CDSSs): reasoning about the patient (the clinical stream), and reasoning about the user (the cognitive-behavioral stream). We propose that CDSS "effectiveness" be measured not only in terms of a system's impact on clinical care, but also in terms of how (and by whom) the system is used, its effect on work processes, and whether it facilitates appropriate decisions by clinicians and patients. Future research into which factors improve the effectiveness of decision support should not regard CDSSs as a single entity, but should instead differentiate systems based on their attributes, users, and the decision being supported.
Journal Article
1001-1006
Medlock, Stephanie
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Wyatt, Jeremy C.
8361be5a-fca9-4acf-b3d2-7ce04126f468
Patel, Vimla L.
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Shortliffe, Edward H
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Abu-Hanna, Ameen
c8d1e7fa-82ec-4ac1-88cc-f5c3f8489824
September 2016
Medlock, Stephanie
8238e4a7-2ae9-4924-bce9-dc4369bb8ef3
Wyatt, Jeremy C.
8361be5a-fca9-4acf-b3d2-7ce04126f468
Patel, Vimla L.
3a578093-cb95-484b-bcde-a466e927349e
Shortliffe, Edward H
a16006d3-3fe1-451f-8175-fa621764f797
Abu-Hanna, Ameen
c8d1e7fa-82ec-4ac1-88cc-f5c3f8489824
Medlock, Stephanie, Wyatt, Jeremy C., Patel, Vimla L., Shortliffe, Edward H and Abu-Hanna, Ameen
(2016)
Modeling information flows in clinical decision support: key insights for enhancing system effectiveness.
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 23 (5), .
(doi:10.1093/jamia/ocv177).
Abstract
A fundamental challenge in the field of clinical decision support is to determine what characteristics of systems make them effective in supporting particular types of clinical decisions. However, we lack such a theory of decision support itself and a model to describe clinical decisions and the systems to support them. This article outlines such a framework. We present a two-stream model of information flow within clinical decision-support systems (CDSSs): reasoning about the patient (the clinical stream), and reasoning about the user (the cognitive-behavioral stream). We propose that CDSS "effectiveness" be measured not only in terms of a system's impact on clinical care, but also in terms of how (and by whom) the system is used, its effect on work processes, and whether it facilitates appropriate decisions by clinicians and patients. Future research into which factors improve the effectiveness of decision support should not regard CDSSs as a single entity, but should instead differentiate systems based on their attributes, users, and the decision being supported.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 October 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 February 2016
Published date: September 2016
Keywords:
Journal Article
Organisations:
Faculty of Medicine
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 396598
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/396598
ISSN: 1067-5027
PURE UUID: 685fe446-e690-4430-9dc6-3eddd59e571e
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Date deposited: 08 Jun 2016 12:27
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:53
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Contributors
Author:
Stephanie Medlock
Author:
Jeremy C. Wyatt
Author:
Vimla L. Patel
Author:
Edward H Shortliffe
Author:
Ameen Abu-Hanna
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