S Iliffe1, T Austin, J Wilcock, M Bryans, S Turner, M Downs. 1. Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, Royal Free and UCL Medical School, Royal Free Campus, Rowland Hill St., London NW3 2PF, England. s.iliffe@pcps.ucl.ac.uk
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diagnosis and management of dementia is a complex process and primary care physicians are under-equipped to deal with uncertainties in the provision of optimal care for the patient. OBJECTIVE: To develop a computer decision support system (CDSS) which could assist physicians with diagnosis and management and improve patient care. METHODS: A design group including general practitioners derived logic pathways for diagnosis and management of dementia and validated them with a multiprofessional expert group. Logic pathways were used to construct a comprehensive CDSS rendered as a series of expert consultations. The CDSS was inserted into commercially available GP systems and bench and field-tested. RESULTS: The complexity of dementia diagnosis and management can be captured in logic pathways which can be expressed as decision trees within existing electronic patient records. The resulting CDSS appears useable in routine practice. CONCLUSION: The impact of this CDSS will be evaluated in a randomised controlled trial of educational interventions in primary care.
BACKGROUND: Diagnosis and management of dementia is a complex process and primary care physicians are under-equipped to deal with uncertainties in the provision of optimal care for the patient. OBJECTIVE: To develop a computer decision support system (CDSS) which could assist physicians with diagnosis and management and improve patient care. METHODS: A design group including general practitioners derived logic pathways for diagnosis and management of dementia and validated them with a multiprofessional expert group. Logic pathways were used to construct a comprehensive CDSS rendered as a series of expert consultations. The CDSS was inserted into commercially available GP systems and bench and field-tested. RESULTS: The complexity of dementia diagnosis and management can be captured in logic pathways which can be expressed as decision trees within existing electronic patient records. The resulting CDSS appears useable in routine practice. CONCLUSION: The impact of this CDSS will be evaluated in a randomised controlled trial of educational interventions in primary care.
Authors: Murna Downs; Stephen Turner; Michelle Bryans; Jane Wilcock; John Keady; Enid Levin; Ronan O'Carroll; Kate Howie; Steve Iliffe Journal: BMJ Date: 2006-03-25
Authors: R T Woods; Esme Moniz-Cook; Steve Iliffe; Peter Campion; Myrra Vernooij-Dassen; Orazio Zanetti; Manuel Franco Journal: J R Soc Med Date: 2003-07 Impact factor: 18.000