| Literature DB >> 29941416 |
Jiantao Bian1, Charlene Weir1,2, Prasad Unni1,3, Damian Borbolla1, Thomas Reese1, Yik-Ki Jacob Wan1, Guilherme Del Fiol1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: At the point of care, evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) is underutilized in helping clinicians meet their information needs.Entities:
Keywords: clinical decision-making; clinician information needs; information display; information foraging theory; information seeking behavior
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29941416 PMCID: PMC6037946 DOI: 10.2196/10507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Visualization of study structure.
Case vignettes used in the formative evaluation.
| Case vignette | Stage Used | Complexitya | Designer | Number of studies |
| Acute coronary syndrome | Easy | Article author (PUb) | 2 | |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | Complex | Adapted from Medscape [ | 10 | |
| Diabetes mellitus | Complex | Adapted from Hirsch et al [ | 10 |
aThe complexity level of each vignette was determined by the number of factors involved in each treatment case.
bPU refers to co-author Prasad Unni.
Construct items and Cronbach alpha.
| Construct and items | Cronbach alpha | |
| .793 | ||
| Dealing with patients in the same clinical domain of the narrative abstracts case vignette | ||
| Dealing with cases with similar clinical complexity as in the case presented in the narrative abstracts vignette | ||
| Dealing with patients in the clinical domain of the interactive visual display case vignette | ||
| Dealing with cases with similar clinical complexity as in the case presented in the interactive visual display vignette | ||
| .870 | ||
| Experience in using computers for work activities | ||
| Experience in using medical literature search tools in general (eg, PubMed, UpToDate) | ||
| Experience in using PubMed for medical literature search | ||
| .877 | ||
| Scan the information quickly | ||
| Quickly obtain the gist of the study findings | ||
| Locate information rapidly | ||
| Interpret individual RCTa results quickly | ||
| Quickly compare the results of multiple RCTs | ||
| Quickly determine study relevance for the case vignette | ||
| .921 | ||
| Comprehend the meaning of the information presented well | ||
| Identify relevant information to understand the study | ||
| Effectively identify relevant RCTs from the search results | ||
| Accomplish tasks with minimal frustration | ||
| .823 | ||
| Spend the least degree of mental effort | ||
| Accomplish task effortlessly | ||
| .921 | ||
| Be satisfied with the presentation (ie, format of the display) of the information | ||
| Easily use the user interface | ||
| Enjoy exploring information | ||
| Have fun seeking information to find answers | ||
| .971 | ||
| Help me with clinical decisions for specific patients | ||
| Find evidence during patient consultations | ||
| Find evidence after patient consultations | ||
| Prepare for patient appointments | ||
| Prepare for patient rounds | ||
| Prepare for teaching | ||
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
Design principles that inspired each feature in the interactive visual displays.
| Information display | Feature | Design principle |
| Information about study population and interventions | ||
| Hyperlink to full abstract within PubMed | ||
| Ability to select specific, most relevant studies for further visualization | ||
| Population, Intervention, Comparison, and Outcome (PICO) table structure | ||
| Hyperlink to full abstract within PubMed and hyperlink to efficacy and side effect graph | ||
| Ability to choose different outcome measures or side effects |
Figure 2Article list table with trials on various treatments for diabetes mellitus. This display is the landing page of the information displays. It provides a table with the title, patient population, and study arms of each study. The goal is to allow clinicians to quickly scan each study and select relevant ones for further review.
Figure 4Efficacy graph display (top) and side effects graph display (bottom) with four trials on various treatments for diabetes mellitus. These two displays provide graphical comparisons of study primary outcomes and adverse effects respectively. Users can choose to set the bar graph for a specific outcome measure, overall adverse effects, or the most common adverse effect across all the arms of the selected studies.
Time to completion (in seconds) and completion success rate for 19 usability tasks.
| Usability task | Average time, seconds (SD) | Median time, seconds (range) | Success rate (%) | |
| Highlight the study arms of the first study | 7 (5) | 5 (3-18) | 83 | |
| Highlight the population of the second study | 7 (14) | 3 (1-59) | 89 | |
| Access the PubMed abstract of the first study | 7 (6) | 4 (3-21) | 82 | |
| This tool provides a textual summary of RCTsa. Please find out how to switch to the text summary of the two listed studies. | 4 (1) | 4 (2-6) | 83 | |
| What is the RCT publication journal and year of the first study? | 7 (6) | 5 (2-26) | 100 | |
| Highlight the aim and conclusion of the second study | 3 (1) | 4 (1-6) | 100 | |
| This tool also provides comparison views for multiple RCTs. Please switch to the comparison view for the two listed studies. | 4 (3) | 3 (1-13) | 94 | |
| Highlight the study population of the first study | 6 (2) | 6 (2-10) | 83 | |
| Highlight the study with the largest sample size | 4 (3) | 4 (1-14) | 100 | |
| Highlight the research arms of the second study | 5 (2) | 5 (2-9) | 94 | |
| Identify one of the study endpoints reported in both studies | 8 (5) | 7 (3-20) | 83 | |
| Within trial 1, which | 11 (10) | 9 (3-44) | 78 | |
| Which | 6 (4) | 5 (2-17) | 78 | |
| Which | 12 (7) | 11 (4-25) | 100 | |
| Highlight the conclusion of the first trial | 4 (5) | 3 (1-23) | 100 | |
| This tool also provides graphical visualization of RCTs. Please switch to the graphical view. | 5 (3) | 5 (2-12) | 89 | |
| Set the graph to show LDLb outcomes | 4 (2) | 3 (1-8) | 83 | |
| Which drug regimen across the two trials showed the greatest reduction in LDL? | 4 (2) | 3 (1-10) | 100 | |
| Switch back to the main menu | 3 (1) | 3 (1-6) | 100 | |
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
bLDL: low density lipoprotein.
Figure 5Mean differences for participants’ perceived efficiency, effectiveness, effort, user experience and preference of interactive visual displays versus narrative abstracts.