Implementing an Electronic Clinical Decision Support Tool Into Routine Care: A Qualitative Study of Stakeholders' Perceptions of a Post-Mastectomy Breast Reconstruction Tool.

IF 1.7
MDM policy & practice Pub Date : 2021-09-17 eCollection Date: 2021-07-01 DOI:10.1177/23814683211042010
Jessica Boateng, Clara N Lee, Randi E Foraker, Terence M Myckatyn, Kimi Spilo, Courtney Goodwin, Mary C Politi
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Objective. To explore barriers and facilitators to implementing an evidence-based clinical decision support (CDS) tool (BREASTChoice) about post-mastectomy breast reconstruction into routine care. Materials and Methods. A stakeholder advisory group of cancer survivors, clinicians who discuss and/or perform breast reconstruction in women with cancer, and informatics professionals helped design and review the interview guide. Based on the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), we conducted qualitative semistructured interviews with key stakeholders (patients, clinicians, informatics professionals) to explore intervention, setting characteristics, and process-level variables that can impact implementation. Interviews were transcribed, coded, and analyzed based on the CFIR framework using both inductive and deductive methods. Results. Fifty-seven potential participants were contacted; 49 (85.9%) were eligible, and 35 (71.4%) were enrolled, continuing until thematic saturation was reached. Participants consisted of 13 patients, 13 clinicians, and 9 informatics professionals. Stakeholders thought that BREASTChoice was useful and provided patients with an evidence-based source of information about post-mastectomy breast reconstruction, including their personalized risks. They felt that BREASTChoice could support shared decision making, improve workflow, and possibly save consultation time, but were uncertain about the best time to deliver BREASTChoice to patients. Some worried about cost, data availability, and security of integrating the tool into an electronic health record. Most acknowledged the importance of showing clinical utility to gain institutional buy-in and encourage routine adoption. Discussion and Conclusion. Stakeholders felt that BREASTChoice could support shared decision making, improve workflow, and reduce consultation time. Addressing key questions such as cost, data integration, and timing of delivering BREASTChoice could build institutional buy-in for CDS implementation. Results can guide future CDS implementation studies.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

在常规护理中实施电子临床决策支持工具:利益相关者对乳房切除术后乳房重建工具的看法的定性研究。
目标。探讨将循证临床决策支持(CDS)工具(BREASTChoice)应用于乳腺切除术后乳房重建常规护理的障碍和促进因素。材料与方法。一个由癌症幸存者、讨论和/或为癌症妇女进行乳房重建的临床医生和信息学专业人员组成的利益相关者咨询小组帮助设计和审查了面试指南。基于实施研究综合框架(CFIR),我们对关键利益相关者(患者、临床医生、信息学专业人员)进行了定性半结构化访谈,以探索可能影响实施的干预措施、设置特征和过程级变量。访谈记录,编码和分析基于CFIR框架使用归纳和演绎的方法。结果。联系了57名潜在参与者;49例(85.9%)入选,35例(71.4%)入选,一直持续到主题饱和。参与者包括13名患者、13名临床医生和9名信息学专业人员。利益相关者认为BREASTChoice是有用的,为患者提供了关于乳房切除术后乳房重建的循证信息来源,包括其个性化风险。他们认为BREASTChoice可以支持共同决策,改善工作流程,并可能节省咨询时间,但不确定向患者提供BREASTChoice的最佳时间。一些人担心将该工具集成到电子健康记录中的成本、数据可用性和安全性。大多数人都承认展示临床效用对获得机构支持和鼓励常规采用的重要性。讨论与结论。利益相关者认为,BREASTChoice可以支持共同决策,改善工作流程,缩短咨询时间。解决成本、数据整合和交付BREASTChoice的时间等关键问题,可以为CDS的实施建立机构支持。研究结果可以指导未来的CDS实施研究。
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