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  1. Olakotan OO, Yusof MM
    J Eval Clin Pract, 2021 Aug;27(4):868-876.
    PMID: 33009698 DOI: 10.1111/jep.13488
    RATIONALE, AIMS, AND OBJECTIVES: Clinical decision support (CDS) generates excessive alerts that disrupt the workflow of clinicians. Therefore, inefficient clinical processes that contribute to the misfit between CDS alert and workflow must be evaluated. This study evaluates the appropriateness of CDS alerts in supporting clinical workflow from a socio-technical perspective.

    METHOD: A qualitative case study evaluation was conducted at a 620-bed public teaching hospital in Malaysia using interview, observation, and document analysis to investigate the features and functions of alert appropriateness and workflow-related issues in cardiological and dermatological settings. The current state map for medication prescribing process was also modelled to identify problems pertinent to CDS alert appropriateness.

    RESULTS: The main findings showed that CDS was not well designed to fit into a clinician's workflow due to influencing factors such as technology (usability, alert content, and alert timing), human (training, perception, knowledge, and skills), organizational (rules and regulations, privacy, and security), and processes (documenting patient information, overriding default option, waste, and delay) impeding the use of CDS with its alert function. We illustrated how alert affect workflow in clinical processes using a Lean tool known as value stream mapping. This study also proposes how CDS alerts should be integrated into clinical workflows to optimize their potential to enhance patient safety.

    CONCLUSION: The design and implementation of CDS alerts should be aligned with and incorporate socio-technical factors. Process improvement methods such as Lean can be used to enhance the appropriateness of CDS alerts by identifying inefficient clinical processes that impede the fit of these alerts into clinical workflow.

  2. Olakotan OO, Mohd Yusof M
    Health Informatics J, 2021 4 16;27(2):14604582211007536.
    PMID: 33853395 DOI: 10.1177/14604582211007536
    A CDSS generates a high number of inappropriate alerts that interrupt the clinical workflow. As a result, clinicians silence, disable, or ignore alerts, thereby undermining patient safety. Therefore, the effectiveness and appropriateness of CDSS alerts need to be evaluated. A systematic review was carried out to identify the factors that affect CDSS alert appropriateness in supporting clinical workflow. Seven electronic databases (PubMed, Scopus, ACM, Science Direct, IEEE, Ovid Medline, and Ebscohost) were searched for English language articles published between 1997 and 2018. Seventy six papers met the inclusion criteria, of which 26, 24, 15, and 11 papers are retrospective cohort, qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-method studies, respectively. The review highlights various factors influencing the appropriateness and efficiencies of CDSS alerts. These factors are categorized into technology, human, organization, and process aspects using a combination of approaches, including socio-technical framework, five rights of CDSS, and Lean. Most CDSS alerts were not properly designed based on human factor methods and principles, explaining high alert overrides in clinical practices. The identified factors and recommendations from the review may offer valuable insights into how CDSS alerts can be designed appropriately to support clinical workflow.
  3. Olakotan OO, Yusof MM
    J Biomed Inform, 2020 06;106:103453.
    PMID: 32417444 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbi.2020.103453
    The overwhelming number of medication alerts generated by clinical decision support systems (CDSS) has led to inappropriate alert overrides, which may lead to unintended patient harm. This review highlights the factors affecting the alert appropriateness of CDSS and barriers to the fit of CDSS alert with clinical workflow. A literature review was conducted to identify features and functions pertinent to CDSS alert appropriateness using the five rights of CDSS. Moreover, a process improvement method, namely, Lean, was used as a tool to optimise clinical workflows, and the appropriate design for CDSS alert using a human automation interaction (HAI) model was recommended. Evaluating the appropriateness of CDSS alert and its impact on workflow provided insights into how alerts can be designed and triggered effectively to support clinical workflow. The application of Lean methods and tools to analyse alert efficiencies in supporting workflow in this study provides an in-depth understanding of alert-workflow fit problems and their root cause, which is required for improving CDSS design. The application of the HAI model is recommended in the design of CDSS alerts to support various levels and stages of alert automations, namely, information acquisition and analysis, decision action and action implementation.
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