Abstract

BackgroundLimiting variability is an essential element to improving quality of care. Frequent resident turnover represents a significant barrier to clinical standardization. Trainees joining new surgical services must familiarize themselves with the guidelines and protocols that direct patient care as well as their learning objectives and expectations. A clinical decision support system (CDSS) is a dynamic, searchable electronic resource intended for use at the point of care. The CDSS can provide convenient and timely access to relevant information for residents, allowing them to incorporate the most up-to-date protocols and guidelines in their daily care of patients. The objective of this quality improvement intervention was to determine the objective rate of CDSS utilization and its subjective value to residents. Materials and methodsAn internally developed, web-based CDSS including essential, clinically useful documents was created for use by trainees on a busy pediatric surgery service. A standardized orientation was provided to each resident and fellow on joining the service, complemented by a summary card to be attached to the trainee's ID badge. CDSS usage was monitored using web analytics. Trainees who rotated before and after the CDSS launch were surveyed regarding attitudes toward clinical resources and confidence in patient management. ResultsDocuments published to the CDSS included 33 clinical guideline documents and 207 additional educational and support files including reference materials from service orientation were made available to trainees and staff. Goals for resident usage were established by evaluation and adaptation of early traffic patterns. Analysis of web traffic collected over 14 consecutive months revealed utilization above target levels, with 4.0 average weekly page views per trainee (IQR: 1.6-5.6). A total of 60 survey responses were received (54% of trainees invited); majorities of rotating trainees and survey respondents were trainees in general surgery and most were interns. Mean composite scores reflected a trend toward improved satisfaction when seeking CDSM (before intervention 3.18 [SD 0.73], after intervention 3.92 [SD 0.70], range 1-5) which was statistically significant (P = 0.005). Mean scores also improved across five of six components of the composite score (mean improvement 0.75, range: 0.53-0.92), four of which were statistically significant (P = 0.001-0.038). Most (59%) respondents reported that they used the CDSS frequently. ConclusionsConvenient access to a CDSS resulted in greater than expected utilization as well as higher resident satisfaction with and confidence in materials provided. A CDSS is a promising tool offering quick access to high-quality information in challenging trainee environments.

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