underutilization of information and knowledge in everyday medical practice: evaluation of a computer-based solution
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The medical history is acknowledged as the
Methods
Histories were acquired by physicians in the usual way and by a computer program interacting directly with patients. Decision-making of what medical issues were queried by computer were made internally by the software, including determination of the chief complaint. The selection of patients was from admissions to the Robert-Bosch-Hospital, Stuttgart, Germany by convenience sampling. Physician-acquired and computer-acquired histories were compared on a patient-by-patient basis for 45 patients.
Results
The computer histories reported 160 problems not recorded in physician histories or slightly more than 3.5 problems per patient. However, physicians but not the computer reported 13 problems. The data show that computer histories reported problems across a range of organ systems, that the problems detected by computer but not physician histories were both acute and chronic and that the computer histories detected a significant number of issues important for preventing further morbidity.
Conclusion
A combination of physician and computer-acquired histories, in non-emergent situations, with the latter available to the physician at the time he or she sees the patient, is a far superior method for collecting historical data than the physician interview alone.
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peter2008bmcunderutilization
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| Authors | ;Fritz Peter;Braun Niko;Zakim David;Alscher Mark |
| Journal | boletin americanista |
| Year | 2008 |
| DOI |
10.1186/1472-6947-8-50
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