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Electronically distributed, computer-generated, individualized feedback enhances the use of a computerized practice

D F Lobach1

  • 1Department of Community and Family Medicine, Duke University, Durham, N.C, USA.

Proceedings : a Conference of the American Medical Informatics Association. AMIA Fall Symposium
|January 1, 1996
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Computer-generated, individualized feedback significantly improved clinician compliance with care guidelines for diabetic patients. This cost-effective electronic method enhances adherence to clinical recommendations.

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Area of Science:

  • Health Informatics
  • Clinical Practice Improvement
  • Primary Care Medicine

Background:

  • Clinical guidelines are crucial for patient care management but often underutilized in practice.
  • Existing computer-generated reminders show limited success in improving guideline adherence.
  • A gap exists in effectively translating guideline recommendations into consistent clinical practice.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate if computer-generated, individualized feedback enhances clinician compliance with care guidelines.
  • To test the hypothesis that personalized feedback improves adherence within a computer-assisted management protocol.
  • To assess the effectiveness of electronic feedback in promoting guideline-recommended care for diabetic patients.

Main Methods:

  • A randomized controlled trial involving 45 primary care clinicians at an academic medical center.
  • The intervention group received biweekly electronic mail with computer-generated reports on guideline adherence for diabetic patients.
  • Clinician compliance with guideline recommendations was the primary outcome measure, compared between intervention and control groups.

Main Results:

  • The intervention group demonstrated significantly higher median compliance (35%) compared to the control group (6.1%) (p < 0.01).
  • Computer-generated, individualized feedback proved effective in increasing clinician adherence to care guidelines.
  • The intervention was achieved without incurring substantial maintenance expenses.

Conclusions:

  • Electronically distributed, individualized feedback is an effective strategy to enhance clinician compliance with care guidelines.
  • Personalized feedback systems can overcome barriers to guideline utilization in clinical practice.
  • This approach offers a cost-effective method for improving the quality of care, particularly for chronic conditions like diabetes.