"What brought you in today?": Modeling patient-provider clinic visits to characterize rural providers' antibiotic treatment decisions.

Research in social & administrative pharmacy : RSAP(2023)

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摘要
BACKGROUND:Designing clinical decision support (CDS) tools is challenging because clinical decision-making must account for an invisible task load: incorporating non-linear objective and subjective factors to make an assessment and treatment plan. This calls for a cognitive task analysis approach. OBJECTIVES:The objectives of this study were to 1.) understand healthcare providers' decision making during a typical clinic visit, and 2.) explore how antibiotic treatment decisions are made when they arise. METHODS:Two cognitive task analysis methods were applied - Hierarchical Task Analysis (HTA) and Operations Sequence Diagramming (OSD) - to 39 h of observational data collected at family medicine, urgent care, and emergency medicine clinical sites. RESULTS:The resulting HTA models included a coding taxonomy detailing ten cognitive goals and associated sub-goals and demonstrated how the goals occur as interactions between the provider and electronic health record, the patient, and the physical clinic environment. Although the HTA detailed resources for antibiotic treatment decisions, antibiotics were a minority of drug classes ordered. The OSD shows the sequence of events and when decisions are made solely at the provider level and when shared decision making occurs with the patient. Qualitative data from the observations informed a constructed vignette case example portraying select tasks from the HTA. CONCLUSIONS:These findings emphasize that the scope of disease states presenting to a generalist clinical setting is broad and could include acute exacerbations of rare diseases within a time-pressured environment. CDS must be accessible, time efficient, and fit within the resource gathering task before treatment decisions are made.
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