Use of on-line evidence-based resources at the point of care.

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES The utility of on-line evidence-based summary databases for answering clinical questions at the point of care is not well understood. Our objectives were to determine if family physician faculty could answer their questions using on-line resources and the proportion of answers that influenced patient care. METHODS This was a prospective study in which clinical faculty in an urban residency training office recorded their clinical questions and their search results. RESULTS Faculty asked 92 questions. Therapy, prognosis, and epidemiology questions were the most common types of inquiries. Fifty-four percent of the questions were fully or partially answered by use of an on-line resource; obtaining an answer required 5-10 minutes of searching. Physicians reported that 62% of the obtained answers modified their opinion, influenced the care of the current patient 56% of the time, and would affect the care of future patients 70% of the time. Slow Internet connection and interruptions were the most frequent barriers reported. DISCUSSION Practicing physicians inexperienced in the use of on-line evidence-based resources answered a proportion of their clinical questions that was comparable to reports of more-experienced searchers; however, the time required to find answers limits the practical use of these databases during patient care time. On-line summary databases such as those used in this study show promise in providing answers that influence care during the patient's visit. With faster Internet connection (or handheld devices) and improved navigability, such resources have the potential to optimize health care in the primary care setting.

[1]  D. Covell,et al.  Information needs in office practice: are they being met? , 1985, Annals of internal medicine.

[2]  D P Connelly,et al.  Physicians' Use of Medical Knowledge Resources , 1990, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[3]  A. Donabedian,et al.  HEALTH SCIENCE INFORMATION MANAGEMENT , 1991 .

[4]  J. Ely,et al.  The information needs of family physicians: case-specific clinical questions. , 1992, The Journal of family practice.

[5]  R A Bankowitz,et al.  Physicians' use of computer software in answering clinical questions. , 1993, Bulletin of the Medical Library Association.

[6]  J. H. Bennett,et al.  Becoming a medical information master: feeling good about not knowing everything. , 1994, The Journal of family practice.

[7]  P. Gorman,et al.  Can primary care physicians' questions be answered using the medical journal literature? , 1994, Bulletin of the Medical Library Association.

[8]  M. Chambliss,et al.  Answering clinical questions. , 1996, The Journal of family practice.

[9]  J. D. Haug,et al.  Physicians' preferences for information sources: a meta-analytic study. , 1997, Bulletin of the Medical Library Association.

[10]  S. Satya‐Murti Evidence-based Medicine: How to Practice and Teach EBM , 1997 .

[11]  L. Illis Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine 14th Edition , 1998, Spinal Cord.

[12]  Jenny Field,et al.  General practitioners' perceptions of the route to evidence based medicine: a questionnaire survey , 1998, BMJ.

[13]  M. Ebell,et al.  Information at the Point of Care: Answering Clinical Questions , 1999, The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.

[14]  M. Ebell,et al.  Analysis of questions asked by family doctors regarding patient care , 1999, BMJ.

[15]  Essentials of Family Medicine. Third edition , 1999, The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.

[16]  W Hersh,et al.  "A world of knowledge at your fingertips": the promise, reality, and future directions of on-line information retrieval. , 1999, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[17]  G. Guyatt,et al.  Practitioners of evidence based care , 2000, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[18]  Jeremy M. Grimshaw,et al.  Changing Provider Behavior: An Overview of Systematic Reviews of Interventions , 2001, Medical care.

[19]  B. Ewigman,et al.  Answering family physicians' clinical questions using electronic medical databases. , 2001, The Journal of family practice.

[20]  M. Ebell,et al.  Obstacles to answering doctors' questions about patient care with evidence: qualitative study , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[21]  MSc Robert H. Fletcher MD,et al.  Evidence-based approach to the medical literature , 2007, Journal of General Internal Medicine.