Objectives: Clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) use alerts to enhance medication safety and reduce medication error rates. A major challenge of medication alerts is their low acceptance rate, limiting their potential benefit. A structured overview about modulators influencing alert acceptance is lacking. Therefore, we aimed to review and compile qualitative and quantitative modulators of alert acceptance and organize them in a comprehensive model.
Methods: In accordance with the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guideline, a literature search in PubMed was started in February 2018 and continued until October 2021. From all included articles, qualitative and quantitative parameters and their impact on alert acceptance were extracted. Related parameters were then grouped into factors, allocated to superordinate determinants, and subsequently further allocated into five categories that were already known to influence alert acceptance.
Results: Out of 539 articles, 60 were included. A total of 391 single parameters were extracted (e.g., patients' comorbidity) and grouped into 75 factors (e.g., comorbidity), and 25 determinants (e.g., complexity) were consequently assigned to the predefined five categories, i.e., CDSS, care provider, patient, setting, and involved drug. More than half of all factors were qualitatively assessed ( = 21) or quantitatively inconclusive ( = 19). Furthermore, 33 quantitative factors clearly influenced alert acceptance (positive correlation: e.g., alert type, patients' comorbidity; negative correlation: e.g., number of alerts per care provider, moment of alert display in the workflow). Two factors (alert frequency, laboratory value) showed contradictory effects, meaning that acceptance was significantly influenced both positively and negatively by these factors, depending on the study. Interventional studies have been performed for only 12 factors while all other factors were evaluated descriptively.
Conclusion: This review compiles modulators of alert acceptance distinguished by being studied quantitatively or qualitatively and indicates their effect magnitude whenever possible. Additionally, it describes how further research should be designed to comprehensively quantify the effect of alert modulators.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0042-1748146 | DOI Listing |
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January 2025
Cleveland Clinic, Department of General Anesthesiology, Cleveland, Ohio; Cleveland Clinic, Department of Outcome Research, Cleveland, Ohio.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Skin Wound Care
January 2025
In the Department of Dermatology, Employees' State Insurance Corporation-Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences and Research, in Basaidarapur, New Delhi, India. Priyanka Hemrajani, MD, is Assistant Professor; Mona Sharma, MD, and Piyush Gupta, MD, are Senior Residents; Tapan Kumar Dhali, MD, is Professor; and Paschal D'souza, MD, is Professor and Head of Department. The authors have disclosed no financial relationships related to this article. Submitted April 8, 2023; accepted in revised form April 2, 2024.
The global pandemic caused by COVID-19 led to numerous novel cases of autoimmune and rheumatologic disorders that developed postinfection. Along these lines, these authors report an unusual case of scleredema following SARS-CoV-2 infection in an individual who lacked any known risk factors. Given the emergence of newer mutant strains of COVID-19 and steadily rising numbers of people receiving COVID-19 vaccinations, physicians should remain alert for as yet unrecognized manifestations of the disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDig Endosc
January 2025
Department of Gastroenterology, Hiroshima University Hospital, Hiroshima, Japan.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Internet Res
January 2025
NOVA National School of Public Health, Public Health Research Centre, Comprehensive Health Research Center, NOVA University Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal.
Background: Heart failure (HF) is a significant global health problem, affecting approximately 64.34 million people worldwide. The worsening of HF, also known as HF decompensation, is a major factor behind hospitalizations, contributing to substantial health care costs related to this condition.
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