Impact of a spirometry expert system on general practitioners' decision making

The present study assessed the impact of computerised spirometry interpretation expert support on the diagnostic achievements of general practitioners (GPs), and on GPs' decision making in diagnosing chronic respiratory disease. A cluster-randomised controlled trial was performed in 78 GPs who...

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Veröffentlicht in:The European respiratory journal 2008-01, Vol.31 (1), p.84-92
Hauptverfasser: Poels, P. J. P, Schermer, T. R. J, Schellekens, D. P. A, Akkermans, R. P, de Vries Robbe, P. F, Kaplan, A, Bottema, B. J. A. M, van Weel, C
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container_issue 1
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container_title The European respiratory journal
container_volume 31
creator Poels, P. J. P
Schermer, T. R. J
Schellekens, D. P. A
Akkermans, R. P
de Vries Robbe, P. F
Kaplan, A
Bottema, B. J. A. M
van Weel, C
description The present study assessed the impact of computerised spirometry interpretation expert support on the diagnostic achievements of general practitioners (GPs), and on GPs' decision making in diagnosing chronic respiratory disease. A cluster-randomised controlled trial was performed in 78 GPs who each completed 10 standardised paper case descriptions. Intervention consisted of support for GPs' spirometry interpretation either by an expert system (expert support group) or by sham information (control group). Agreement of GPs' diagnoses was compared with an expert panel judgement, which served as the primary outcome. Secondary outcomes were: additional diagnostic test rates; width of differential diagnosis; certainty of diagnosis; estimated severity of disease; referral rate; and medication or nonmedication changes. Effects were expressed as odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). There were no differences between the expert support and control groups in the agreement between GPs and expert panel diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (OR (95% CI) 1.08 (0.70-1.66)), asthma (1.13 (0.70-1.80)), and absence of respiratory disease (1.32 (0.61-2.86)). A higher rate of additional diagnostic tests was observed in the expert support group (2.5 (1.17-5.35)). Computerised spirometry expert support had no detectable benefit on general practitioners' diagnostic achievements and the decision-making process when diagnosing chronic respiratory disease.
doi_str_mv 10.1183/09031936.00012007
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subjects Biological and medical sciences
Computerized, statistical medical data processing and models in biomedicine
Decision Making
Decision Support Systems, Clinical
Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted
Expert Systems
Family Practice - methods
Female
Humans
Male
Medical management aid. Diagnosis aid
Medical sciences
Odds Ratio
Physicians, Family
Pneumology
Referral and Consultation
Reproducibility of Results
Software
Spirometry - instrumentation
Spirometry - methods
title Impact of a spirometry expert system on general practitioners' decision making
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