1 / 40

Trying to meet the information needs of doctors

Trying to meet the information needs of doctors. Richard Smith, Editor, BMJ. What I want to talk about. What do we know about what information they need? How are we doing in meeting their needs? How could we do better?. What does research tell us about the information needs of doctors?.

lise
Download Presentation

Trying to meet the information needs of doctors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Trying to meet the information needs of doctors Richard Smith, Editor, BMJ

  2. What I want to talk about • What do we know about what information they need? • How are we doing in meeting their needs? • How could we do better?

  3. What does research tell us about the information needs of doctors?

  4. Research on doctors’ information needs: Covell, 1985 • 47 LA physicians in internal medicine in office practice ; 12 generalists and 35 subspecialists • Saw 1-16 patients during the half day. • A closed questionnaire completed before the office interviews • An interview after each patient was seen to identify any questions that might need answering • An interview at the end of the office visit

  5. Research on doctors’ information needs: Covell, 1985 • Physicians said they needed information about once a week • But 269 questions were raised during the interviews after 409 patient visits - about two questions for every three patients seen. • Questions were about: • Treatment of specific conditions: one third • Diagnosis: one quarter • Drugs: 14%

  6. Research on doctors’ information needs: Covell, 1985 • Questions of fact (“What are the side effects of bromocriptine?”) 40% • Questions of medical opinion (“How do you manage a patient with labile hypertension?”) 45% • Non medical information (“How do you arrange home care for a patient?”) 16%

  7. Research on doctors’ information needs: Covell, 1985 • Many questions were asked in a “non-generalised but practice related fashion” • Not “What are the indications for measuring serum procainamide?” • But “Should I test the serum procainamide level in this patient?”

  8. Reported and observed information sources of doctors

  9. Research on doctors’ information needs: Osheroff et al, 1991 • 24 doctors and medical students in a university based general medical service in Pittsburgh. • Observed by an anthropologist, then internal medicine physicians identified information requests by reviewing texts prepared from field notes • 519 information requests during 17 hours of observation on inpatient and outpatient activity. • During this time the 24 doctors and students cared for about 90 patients

  10. Research on doctors’ information needs: Osheroff et al, 1991 • 454 “strictly clinical” information requests--five for each patient • 75% related to patient care • 60% about specific patients • 25% about treatment • 16% about drugs

  11. Research on doctors’ information needs: Forsythe et al, 1992 • Same study, only 35 hours of observation • Many information needs are not expressed as grammatical questions or even verbalised • The “information seeking messages may be interpretable only within the particular context • The needs may be for much more than specific clinical information. Doctors and students may be asking for support, guidance, and approval of what they are doing.

  12. How many questions arise when doctors meet patients?

  13. Conclusions from studies of information needs of doctors • Information needs do arise regularly when doctors see patients • Questions are most likely to be about treatment, particularly drugs. • Questions are often complex and multidimensional • The need for information is often much more than a question about medical knowledge. Doctors are looking for guidance, psychological support, affirmation, commiseration, sympathy, judgement, and feedback.

  14. Conclusions from studies of information needs of doctors • Most of the questions generated in consultations go unanswered • Doctors are most likely to seek answers to their questions from other doctors • Most of the questions can be answered - but it is time consuming and expensive to do so • Doctors seem to be overwhelmed by the information provided for them

  15. How are we meeting the information needs?

  16. Current problems • Think of all the information that you might read to help you do your job better • How much of it do you read?

  17. Current problems • Do you feel guilty about how much or how little you read?

  18. Current problems • Think of your information supply and think of an adjective to describe it

  19. Impossible Impossible Impossible Impossible Impossible Impossible Overwhelming Overwhelming Overwhelming Overwhelming Overwhelming Overwhelming Difficult Difficult Difficult Difficult Daunting Daunting Daunting Pissed off Choked Depressed Despairing Worrisome Saturation Vast Help Exhausted Frustrated Time consuming Dreadful Awesome Struggle Mindboggling Unrealistic Stress Challenging Challenging Challenging Excited Vital importance Words used by 41 doctors to describe their information supply

  20. The information paradox:Muir Gray • Doctors are overwhelmed with information yet cannot find the information they need

  21. Information paradox • “Water, water, everywhere • Nor any drop to drink” • The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Samuel Taylor Coleridge

  22. Information: the poet’s view • Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? • And where is the knowledge we have lost in information? • T S Eliot

  23. How much time did you spend reading around your patients in the past week?

  24. Reading of Bristol general practitioners

  25. How far behind are you with your reading? • Number of journals 10 000 • New articles a week 40 000 • Time to read article 30 mins • A doctor spends all day reading; after six weeks how far behind is he or she with his or her reading? • A century

  26. Utility of information • Utility=relevance x validity x interactivity work to access

  27. Utility of different sources of information

  28. What’s wrong with medical journals • Don’t meet information needs • Too many of them • Too much rubbish • Too hard work • Not relevant • Too boring • Too expensive

  29. What’s wrong with medical journals • Don’t add value • Slow every thing down • Too biased • Anti-innovatory • Too awful to look at • Too pompous • Too establishment

  30. What’s wrong with medical journals • Don’t reach the developing world • Can’t cope with fraud • Nobody reads them • Too much duplication • Too concerned with authors rather than readers

  31. How to do better with meeting the information needs of doctors?

  32. Clinical Evidence • Compendium of the best available evidence for effective health care • Updated every six months • Issues 3-14 circulating to 500 000 physicians in US • 40 000 sold to the NHS

  33. Features of Clinical Evidence • “We provide the evidence; you and the patient make the decision” • Topics and questions guided by clinicians and patients • Explicit, evidence based methodology • Identifies gaps in the evidence • Evidence on benefits and harms • Web version

  34. “The thing” that will save us • Able to answer highly complex questions • Connected to a large valid database • Electronic - portable, fast, and easy to use • Prompts doctors - in a helpful rather than demeaning way

  35. “The thing” that will save us • Connected to the patient record • A servant of patients as doctors • Responds to the need for psychological support and affirmation

  36. Conclusions • Many questions arise as doctors consult with patients • Most are not answered • We are doing badly with meeting the information needs of doctors • They are overwhelmed with information but cannot find information when they need it • New technology opens up the possibility of doing much better • It won’t be easy and will take time, money, and culture change

More Related