| Literature DB >> 25563219 |
Megan Doerr1, Emily Edelman2, Emily Gabitzsch3, Charis Eng4, Kathryn Teng5.
Abstract
Family health history is a leading predictor of disease risk. Nonetheless, it is underutilized to guide care and, therefore, is ripe for health information technology intervention. To fill the family health history practice gap, Cleveland Clinic has developed a family health history collection and clinical decision support tool, MyFamily. This report describes the impact and process of implementing MyFamily into primary care, cancer survivorship and cancer genetics clinics. Ten providers participated in semi-structured interviews that were analyzed to identify opportunities for process improvement. Participants universally noted positive effects on patient care, including increases in quality, personalization of care and patient engagement. The impact on clinical workflow varied by practice setting, with differences observed in the ease of integration and the use of specific report elements. Tension between the length of the report and desired detail was appreciated. Barriers and facilitators to the process of implementation were noted, dominated by the theme of increased integration with the electronic medical record. These results fed real-time improvement cycles to reinforce clinician use. This model will be applied in future institutional efforts to integrate clinical genomic applications into practice and may be useful for other institutions considering the implementation of tools for personalizing medical management.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25563219 PMCID: PMC4263968 DOI: 10.3390/jpm4020115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1MyFamily workflow schema showing clinician acceptance of MyFamily report.
Conditions assessed by MyFamily at the start of implementation.
| Familial breast cancer |
| Familial colorectal cancer |
| Familial endometrial cancer |
| Familial ovarian cancer |
| Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer syndrome |
| Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer syndrome |
| Abdominal aortic aneurysm * |
| Diabetes * |
* included in primary care (PC) implementation only.
Overview of themes and findings.
| Themes | Impact on patient care | Impact on clinical encounter and clinician workflow | Process of implementation |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Quality Patient engagement Institutional impact |
Impact on workflow Time Navigation Length and detail Risk assessment Pedigrees |
Barriers Facilitators Future functions |
Primary care provider (PC) and cancer genetic counselor (GC) data addressing quality of care.
| Title | PC | GC |
|---|---|---|
| Provides standard and equal care to patients | “Often times that [family health history conversation] doesn’t happen especially if patients have a lot of medical problems, you know we might not spend as much time on preventative care… having that opportunity to sit down with them and their family history kinda gives that opportunity to have that discussion.” (PC101) | “I can see it helping a lot of people that… would never come to attention if they are healthy individuals with concerning family history… something like [ |
| Accuracy of family health history | “…if that patient is starting that dialogue at home where they have access to the information, talking to families, friends, relatives, they could possibly do it more accurately.” (PC102) | “…it increases my confidence that we are getting accurate information because I think it forces patients to think about it ahead of time, and they ask family members for information and they come in better prepared to answer our questions, so in that sense, I think [ |
| Supports cross-disciplinary care | “…having a more detailed history and having that analyzed and then given to me… helps me decide… should I send him off to a specialist sooner than later or should I really be on their case to get that colonoscopy done and that sort of stuff.” (PC104) | “…I think [the use of |
Patient engagement.
| PC | GC |
|---|---|
| “I think that it’s a great way to really engage patients and to really help them to see [that] what they are doing, the work that they are doing pre-visit, is really helping us to make this preventative [care] plan with them. So, I really like that aspect of it…. I think they enjoyed seeing their results of their efforts during the clinical encounter, I think they really appreciated that.” (PC101) | “[my favorite part is] the fact that the patients are more engaged…. They have been more active in their health care. They have been more active in their family history gathering. They come in having a better idea of what to expect.” (GC107) |
Primary care provider (PC) and cancer genetic counselor (GC) data addressing workflow and usability. EMR, electronic medical record.
| Title | PC | GC |
|---|---|---|
| Impact on Workflow and Time | “…part of my routine when I do a physical, is review family history, so I look at my family history record in [the EMR] and then I go to [the | “…the actual interaction with the patient has not changed much…[but afterwards] what I have been doing is providing our assistant with [the pedigree] to have her re-enter it…[to] generate a new pedigree, and that process takes a while because she is busy. So, the flow has not been as quick as I would typically like.” (GC105) |
| Risk Assessment | “I really have been looking for something that can help with clinical decision making… I think [the risk assessment] is a valuable addition to our armamentarium of… taking care of the patient.” (PC104) | “…but for the risk assessment… that is my job… I think [the risk assessment] is much more applicable or much more helpful, I guess, to, like, a generalist.” (GC107) |
| Pedigrees | “…it is much easier for me to look at a pedigree and have a clearer picture of why a person was flagged as high risk… which surprises me, because I don’t normally use pedigrees, but I have found it to be very useful information.” (PC101) | “I picked the [pedigree] that has the most information on it. I print it out, and then I look at the other pedigrees and handwrite in the information from the other pedigrees, and then I used that as my structure to go over with the patient.” (GC105) |