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First published October 5, 2003 as JAMIA PrePrint; doi:10.1197/jamia.M1364
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J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2004;11:50-59. DOI 10.1197/jamia.M1364.
© 2004 American Medical Informatics Association


Research Paper

Human Factors Barriers to the Effective Use of Ten HIV Clinical Reminders

Emily S. Patterson, PhD, Anh D. Nguyen, MS, James P. Halloran, MSN, RN, CNS and Steven M. Asch, MD, MPH

Affiliations of the authors: VA Getting at Patient Safety Center, Cincinnati VAMC, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH (ESP); West LA VAMC, Los Angeles, CA (ADN); Center for Quality Management, VA Public Health Strategic Health Care Group, San Antonio, TX (JPH); West LA VAMC, RAND, Los Angeles, CA (SMA) USA

Correspondence and reprints: Emily S. Patterson, PhD, 210 Baker Systems, 1971 Neil Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210; e-mail: <patterson.150{at}osu.edu>.

Received for publication: 03/14/03; accepted for publication: 09/22/03.

Objective: Substantial variations in adherence to guidelines for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care have been documented. To evaluate their effectiveness in improving quality of care, ten computerized clinical reminders (CRs) were implemented at two pilot and eight study sites. The aim of this study was to identify human factors barriers to the use of these CRs.

Design: Observational study was conducted of CRs in use at eight outpatient clinics for one day each and semistructured interviews were conducted with physicians, pharmacists, nurses, and case managers.

Measurements: Detailed handwritten field notes of interpretations and actions using the CRs and responses to interview questions were used for measurement.

Results: Barriers present at more than one site were (1) workload during patient visits (8 of 8 sites), (2) time to document when a CR was not clinically relevant (8 of 8 sites), (3) inapplicability of the CR due to context-specific reasons (9 of 26 patients), (4) limited training on how to use the CR software for rotating staff (5 of 8 sites) and permanent staff (3 of 8 sites), (5) perceived reduction of quality of provider–patient interaction (3 of 23 permanent staff), and (6) the decision to use paper forms to enable review of resident physician orders prior to order entry (2 of 8 sites).

Conclusion: Six human factors barriers to the use of HIV CRs were identified. Reducing these barriers has the potential to increase use of the CRs and thereby improve the quality of HIV care.




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