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Evidence-based guidelines and decision support services: a discussion and evaluation in triple assessment of suspected breast cancer

Evidence-based guidelines and decision support services: a discussion and evaluation in triple assessment of suspected breast cancer
Evidence-based guidelines and decision support services: a discussion and evaluation in triple assessment of suspected breast cancer
Widespread health service goals to improve consistency and safety in patient care have prompted considerable investment in the development of evidence-based clinical guidelines. Computerised decision support (CDS) systems have been proposed as a means to implement guidelines in practice. This paper discusses the general concept in oncology and presents an evaluation of a CDS system to support triple assessment (TA) in breast cancer care. Balanced-block crossover experiment and questionnaire study. One stop clinic for symptomatic breast patients. Twenty-four practising breast clinicians from United Kingdom National Health Service hospitals. A web-based CDS system. Clinicians made significantly more deviations from guideline recommendations without decision support (60 out of 120 errors without CDS; 16 out of 120 errors with CDS, P<0.001). Ignoring minor deviations, 16 potentially critical errors arose in the no-decision-support arm of the trial compared with just one (P=0.001) when decision support was available. Opinions of participating clinicians towards the CDS tool became more positive after they had used it (P<0.025). The use of decision support capabilities in TA may yield significant measurable benefits for quality and safety of patient care. This is an important option for improving compliance with evidence-based practice guidelines.
0007-0920
1490-1496
Patkar, V.
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Hurt, C.
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Steele, R.
7b1e6d15-a296-43bc-8ff2-37fbeb71b0ae
Love, S.
5868f16f-7120-44b6-8e76-8d2a4797c049
Purushotham, A.
ed63d5eb-dea6-4978-ad06-89ad2a9b5df9
Williams, M.
caf66400-af9b-4225-8b52-c281131b3802
Thomson, R.
0a8ef4e9-3fca-495d-8105-7a846e8118d7
Fox, J.
885420e6-81a0-44e9-9b82-e4683b6ba3c4
et al.
Patkar, V.
8cce448c-91e0-4368-9ac9-c0fa40d6838c
Hurt, C.
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Steele, R.
7b1e6d15-a296-43bc-8ff2-37fbeb71b0ae
Love, S.
5868f16f-7120-44b6-8e76-8d2a4797c049
Purushotham, A.
ed63d5eb-dea6-4978-ad06-89ad2a9b5df9
Williams, M.
caf66400-af9b-4225-8b52-c281131b3802
Thomson, R.
0a8ef4e9-3fca-495d-8105-7a846e8118d7
Fox, J.
885420e6-81a0-44e9-9b82-e4683b6ba3c4

Patkar, V., Hurt, C. and Steele, R. , et al. (2006) Evidence-based guidelines and decision support services: a discussion and evaluation in triple assessment of suspected breast cancer. British Journal of Cancer, 95, 1490-1496, [95]. (doi:10.1038/sj.bjc.6603470).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Widespread health service goals to improve consistency and safety in patient care have prompted considerable investment in the development of evidence-based clinical guidelines. Computerised decision support (CDS) systems have been proposed as a means to implement guidelines in practice. This paper discusses the general concept in oncology and presents an evaluation of a CDS system to support triple assessment (TA) in breast cancer care. Balanced-block crossover experiment and questionnaire study. One stop clinic for symptomatic breast patients. Twenty-four practising breast clinicians from United Kingdom National Health Service hospitals. A web-based CDS system. Clinicians made significantly more deviations from guideline recommendations without decision support (60 out of 120 errors without CDS; 16 out of 120 errors with CDS, P<0.001). Ignoring minor deviations, 16 potentially critical errors arose in the no-decision-support arm of the trial compared with just one (P=0.001) when decision support was available. Opinions of participating clinicians towards the CDS tool became more positive after they had used it (P<0.025). The use of decision support capabilities in TA may yield significant measurable benefits for quality and safety of patient care. This is an important option for improving compliance with evidence-based practice guidelines.

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Accepted/In Press date: 13 October 2006
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 November 2006
Published date: December 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488301
ISSN: 0007-0920
PURE UUID: 0c950883-7007-43ea-8f7f-be8d4f51063d
ORCID for C. Hurt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1206-8355

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Date deposited: 19 Mar 2024 18:13
Last modified: 23 Mar 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: V. Patkar
Author: C. Hurt ORCID iD
Author: R. Steele
Author: S. Love
Author: A. Purushotham
Author: M. Williams
Author: R. Thomson
Author: J. Fox
Corporate Author: et al.

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