| Literature DB >> 20067624 |
Chee Peng Hor1, James M O'Donnell, Andrew W Murphy, Timothy O'Brien, Thomas J B Kropmans.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Electronic clinical decision support (CDS) is increasingly establishing its role in evidence-based clinical practice. Considerable evidence supports its enhancement of efficiency in e-Prescribing, but some controversy remains. This study evaluated the practicality and identified the perceived benefits of, and barriers to, its future adoption in the West of Ireland.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20067624 PMCID: PMC2824732 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-10-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Figure 1Adoption of EMR among GPs in single-handed and group practices.
Figure 2GPs' evaluation on different CDS mechanisms in assisting their prescribing decision.
GPs' attitudes and preparedness towards CDS-eP
| Statements | Agree | Neutral | Disagree |
|---|---|---|---|
| I am familiar with what CDS-eP is and how it is used in clinical prctice (N = 93) | 27% | 12% | 61% |
| I believe that CDS-eP has the capacity to improve prescribing quality (N = 91) | 71% | 28% | 1% |
| I believe that using CDS-eP may reduce prescribing errors (N = 91 | 84% | 14% | 2% |
| I believe that CDS-eP may reduce my decision making power in prescribing (N = 90) | 19% | 32% | 49% |
| I am open to learning/using new CDS-eP (N = 95) | 94% | 4% | 2% |
| My practice is willing to invest greater resources in CDS-eP in the future (N = 92) | 62% | 26% | 12% |
N -- number of respondents, excluding missing responses. Total respondents = 98
Potential barriers impeding implementation of CDS-eP in general practice
| Perceived barriers | Agree | Neutral | Disagree |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lack of convincing evidence regarding its effectiveness (N = 88) | 22% | 44% | 34% |
| High sensitivity of drug -- drug interaction or drug allergy markers (N = 85) | 46% | 41% | 13% |
| Concern about the degree of flexibility for the physician to override CDS-eP (N = 88) | 44% | 32% | 24% |
| Lack of financial incentives (N = 87) | 70% | 24% | 6% |
| Lack of acceptable, standardized product software (N = 88) | 61% | 33% | 7% |
| Lack of a strategic plan for implementation (N = 89) | 78% | 20% | 2% |
N -- number of respondents, excluding missing responses. Total respondents = 98
Figure 3Presumptive responses towards potential alerts flagged by CDS-eP during prescribing process.