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Clinical decision support system to optimise symptom management in palliative medicine: focus group study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of a clinical decision support system (CDSS) for palliative care, focusing on its reception by various stakeholders.
  • Participants across six focus groups expressed that the CDSS could enhance symptom management, but they voiced concerns about physician autonomy, the validity of patient-reported data, and the continuity of care.
  • Key barriers to implementation include the need for clear usage guidelines, addressing hesitations about patient involvement, and ensuring the system integrates smoothly into existing care processes.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Suboptimal symptom control in patients with life-limiting illnesses is a major issue. A clinical decision support system (CDSS) that combines a patient-reported symptom assessment scale (SAS) and guideline-based individualised recommendations has the potential to improve symptom management. However, lacking end-user acceptance often prevents CDSS use in daily practice.We aimed to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of a palliative care CDSS according to its targeted end-users.

Methods: Six focus groups with different groups of stakeholders were conducted: (1) patient representatives; (2) community nurses; (3) hospital nurses; (4) general practitioners; (5) hospital physicians and (6) palliative care specialists. Audiotapes were transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed.

Results: Fifty-one stakeholders (6-12 per focus group) participated. Six themes were discussed: effect, validity, continuity, practical usability, implementation and additional features. All participants expected a CDSS to improve symptom management, for example, by reminding clinicians of blind spots and prompting patient participation. They feared interference with professional autonomy of physicians, doubted the validity of using a patient-reported SAS as CDSS input and thought lacking care continuity would complicate CDSS use. Clinicians needed clear criteria for when to use the CDSS (eg, life-limiting illness, timing in illness trajectory). Participants preferred a patient-coordinated system but were simultaneously concerned patients may be unwilling or unable to fill out an SAS.

Conclusions: A palliative care CDSS was considered useful for improving symptom management. To develop a feasible system, barriers for successful implementation must be addressed including concerns about using a patient-reported SAS, lacking care continuity and unclear indications for use.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2021-002940DOI Listing

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