The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study

Abstract BackgroundComputerized clinical decision support systems (CDSS) are increasingly being used in clinical practice to improve health care delivery. Mobile apps are a type of CDSS that are currently being increasingly used, particularly in lifestyle interventions and dis...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Madhu Prita Prakash, Aravinda Thiagalingam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2024-12-01
Series:JMIR Cardio
Online Access:https://cardio.jmir.org/2024/1/e55958
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841555907463348224
author Madhu Prita Prakash
Aravinda Thiagalingam
author_facet Madhu Prita Prakash
Aravinda Thiagalingam
author_sort Madhu Prita Prakash
collection DOAJ
description Abstract BackgroundComputerized clinical decision support systems (CDSS) are increasingly being used in clinical practice to improve health care delivery. Mobile apps are a type of CDSS that are currently being increasingly used, particularly in lifestyle interventions and disease prevention. However, the use of such apps in acute patient care, diagnosis, and management has not been studied to a great extent. The Pathway for Acute Coronary Syndrome Assessment (PACSA) is a set of guidelines developed to standardize the management of suspected acute coronary syndrome across emergency departments in New South Wales, Australia. These guidelines, which risk stratify patients and provide an appropriate management plan, are currently available as PDF documents or physical paper-based PACSA documents. The routine use of these documents and their acceptability among clinicians is uncertain. Presenting the PACSA guidelines on a mobile app in a sequential format may be a more acceptable alternative to the current paper-based PACSA documents. ObjectiveThis study aimed to assess the utility and acceptability of a clinician-developed app modeling the PACSA guidelines as an alternative to the existing paper-based PACSA documents in assessing chest pain presentations to the emergency department. MethodsAn app modeling the PACSA guidelines was created using the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) platform by a cardiologist, with a total development time of <3 hours. The app utilizes a sequential design, requiring participants to input patient data in a step-wise fashion to reach the final patient risk stratification. Emergency department doctors were asked to use the app and apply it to two hypothetical patient scenarios. Participants then completed a survey to assess if the PACSA app offered any advantages over the current paper-based PACSA documents ResultsParticipants (n=31) ranged from junior doctors to senior physicians. Current clinician adherence to the paper-based PACSA documents was low with 55% (N=17) never using it in their daily practice. Totally, 42% of participants found the PACSA app easier to use compared to the paper-based PACSA documents and 58% reported that the PACSA app was also faster to use. The perceived usefulness of the PACSA app was similar to the perceived usefulness of the paper-based PACSA documents. ConclusionsThe PACSA app offers a more efficient and user-friendly alternative to the current paper-based PACSA documents and may promote clinician adherence to evidence-based guidelines. Additional studies with a larger number of participants are required to assess the transferability of the PACSA app to everyday practice. Furthermore, apps are relatively easy to develop using existing online platforms, with the scope for clinicians to develop such apps for other evidence-based guidelines and across different specialties.
format Article
id doaj-art-8589b8fead624ce48fa283d2dc629cca
institution Kabale University
issn 2561-1011
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format Article
series JMIR Cardio
spelling doaj-art-8589b8fead624ce48fa283d2dc629cca2025-01-07T20:32:22ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Cardio2561-10112024-12-018e55958e5595810.2196/55958The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot StudyMadhu Prita Prakashhttp://orcid.org/0009-0005-3645-560XAravinda Thiagalingamhttp://orcid.org/0000-0002-7763-7806 Abstract BackgroundComputerized clinical decision support systems (CDSS) are increasingly being used in clinical practice to improve health care delivery. Mobile apps are a type of CDSS that are currently being increasingly used, particularly in lifestyle interventions and disease prevention. However, the use of such apps in acute patient care, diagnosis, and management has not been studied to a great extent. The Pathway for Acute Coronary Syndrome Assessment (PACSA) is a set of guidelines developed to standardize the management of suspected acute coronary syndrome across emergency departments in New South Wales, Australia. These guidelines, which risk stratify patients and provide an appropriate management plan, are currently available as PDF documents or physical paper-based PACSA documents. The routine use of these documents and their acceptability among clinicians is uncertain. Presenting the PACSA guidelines on a mobile app in a sequential format may be a more acceptable alternative to the current paper-based PACSA documents. ObjectiveThis study aimed to assess the utility and acceptability of a clinician-developed app modeling the PACSA guidelines as an alternative to the existing paper-based PACSA documents in assessing chest pain presentations to the emergency department. MethodsAn app modeling the PACSA guidelines was created using the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) platform by a cardiologist, with a total development time of <3 hours. The app utilizes a sequential design, requiring participants to input patient data in a step-wise fashion to reach the final patient risk stratification. Emergency department doctors were asked to use the app and apply it to two hypothetical patient scenarios. Participants then completed a survey to assess if the PACSA app offered any advantages over the current paper-based PACSA documents ResultsParticipants (n=31) ranged from junior doctors to senior physicians. Current clinician adherence to the paper-based PACSA documents was low with 55% (N=17) never using it in their daily practice. Totally, 42% of participants found the PACSA app easier to use compared to the paper-based PACSA documents and 58% reported that the PACSA app was also faster to use. The perceived usefulness of the PACSA app was similar to the perceived usefulness of the paper-based PACSA documents. ConclusionsThe PACSA app offers a more efficient and user-friendly alternative to the current paper-based PACSA documents and may promote clinician adherence to evidence-based guidelines. Additional studies with a larger number of participants are required to assess the transferability of the PACSA app to everyday practice. Furthermore, apps are relatively easy to develop using existing online platforms, with the scope for clinicians to develop such apps for other evidence-based guidelines and across different specialties.https://cardio.jmir.org/2024/1/e55958
spellingShingle Madhu Prita Prakash
Aravinda Thiagalingam
The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study
JMIR Cardio
title The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study
title_full The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study
title_fullStr The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study
title_short The Role of Clinician-Developed Applications in Promoting Adherence to Evidence-Based Guidelines: Pilot Study
title_sort role of clinician developed applications in promoting adherence to evidence based guidelines pilot study
url https://cardio.jmir.org/2024/1/e55958
work_keys_str_mv AT madhupritaprakash theroleofcliniciandevelopedapplicationsinpromotingadherencetoevidencebasedguidelinespilotstudy
AT aravindathiagalingam theroleofcliniciandevelopedapplicationsinpromotingadherencetoevidencebasedguidelinespilotstudy
AT madhupritaprakash roleofcliniciandevelopedapplicationsinpromotingadherencetoevidencebasedguidelinespilotstudy
AT aravindathiagalingam roleofcliniciandevelopedapplicationsinpromotingadherencetoevidencebasedguidelinespilotstudy