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Related Experiment Videos

Professional values and informatics: what is the connection?

Peter Pritchard1

  • 1Advanced Computation Laboratory, Cancer Research, London, UK. peter.pritchard@tiscali.co.uk

Informatics in Primary Care
|August 21, 2004
PubMed
Summary
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General practitioners (GPs) must align their practice with professional values. Advanced informatics, including knowledge-based decision support systems, can help GPs measure and improve the quality of care they provide.

Area of Science:

  • Medical Informatics
  • Healthcare Quality Improvement
  • Professional Ethics in Medicine

Background:

  • General practitioners (GPs) strive to provide high-quality, humane care, identifying as "good" doctors.
  • Existing professional guidelines offer imperatives but lack depth on the values that shape physician behavior.
  • Defining and assessing personal and team values is challenging for individual GPs and healthcare teams.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the intersection of professional values and informatics in general practice.
  • To investigate how informatics can help GPs align their actions with their espoused values.
  • To propose advanced informatics solutions for measuring and improving clinical practice.

Main Methods:

  • The study reviews the role of informatics in applying medical knowledge, evidence, and guidelines.

Related Experiment Videos

  • It discusses the potential of informatics to audit outcomes and assess adherence to professional values.
  • The concept of knowledge-based decision support (KBDS) systems is examined as a tool for self-audit and system improvement.
  • Main Results:

    • Informatics offers essential tools for GPs to evaluate whether their actions align with their professional values, transforming espoused values into values-in-action.
    • Advanced informatics applications show potential for enhancing and quantifying diagnostic and therapeutic skills, though adoption is slow.
    • Locally implemented KBDS systems can facilitate self-audit and move towards self-organizing healthcare systems.

    Conclusions:

    • Integrating informatics into general practice is crucial for bridging the gap between professional values and actual clinical behavior.
    • Knowledge-based decision support systems represent a significant advancement for enabling self-assessment and quality improvement in primary care.
    • The development and adoption of user-friendly KBDS systems are key to fostering a self-auditing and continuously improving healthcare environment.