TY - JOUR
T1 - Features of effective medical knowledge resources to support point of care learning
T2 - A focus group study
AU - Cook, David A.
AU - Sorensen, Kristi J.
AU - Hersh, William
AU - Berger, Richard A.
AU - Wilkinson, John M.
PY - 2013/11/25
Y1 - 2013/11/25
N2 - Objective: Health care professionals access various information sources to quickly answer questions that arise in clinical practice. The features that favorably influence the selection and use of knowledge resources remain unclear. We sought to better understand how clinicians select among the various knowledge resources available to them, and from this to derive a model for an effective knowledge resource. Methods: We conducted 11 focus groups at an academic medical center and outlying community sites. We included a purposive sample of 50 primary care and subspecialist internal medicine and family medicine physicians. We transcribed focus group discussions and analyzed these using a constant comparative approach to inductively identify features that influence the selection of knowledge resources. Results: We identified nine features that influence users' selection of knowledge resources, namely efficiency (with subfeatures of comprehensiveness, searchability, and brevity), integration with clinical workflow, credibility, user familiarity, capacity to identify a human expert, reflection of local care processes, optimization for the clinical question (e.g., diagnosis, treatment options, drug side effect), currency, and ability to support patient education. No single existing resource exemplifies all of these features. Conclusion: The influential features identified in this study will inform the development of knowledge resources, and could serve as a framework for future research in this field.
AB - Objective: Health care professionals access various information sources to quickly answer questions that arise in clinical practice. The features that favorably influence the selection and use of knowledge resources remain unclear. We sought to better understand how clinicians select among the various knowledge resources available to them, and from this to derive a model for an effective knowledge resource. Methods: We conducted 11 focus groups at an academic medical center and outlying community sites. We included a purposive sample of 50 primary care and subspecialist internal medicine and family medicine physicians. We transcribed focus group discussions and analyzed these using a constant comparative approach to inductively identify features that influence the selection of knowledge resources. Results: We identified nine features that influence users' selection of knowledge resources, namely efficiency (with subfeatures of comprehensiveness, searchability, and brevity), integration with clinical workflow, credibility, user familiarity, capacity to identify a human expert, reflection of local care processes, optimization for the clinical question (e.g., diagnosis, treatment options, drug side effect), currency, and ability to support patient education. No single existing resource exemplifies all of these features. Conclusion: The influential features identified in this study will inform the development of knowledge resources, and could serve as a framework for future research in this field.
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U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0080318
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0080318
M3 - Article
C2 - 24282535
AN - SCOPUS:84894267903
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 8
JO - PLoS One
JF - PLoS One
IS - 11
M1 - e80318
ER -