Title: Internet Point of Care PoC
1Internet Point of Care (PoC)
- Illinois Alliance for CME
- Stonegate Conference Centre
- June 23, 2006
2Disclosures
- I have no relevant financial interests to
disclose. - Charles E. Willis, Vice President
- Education and Training
- American Gastroenterological Association (AGA)
Institute - cwillis_at_gastro.org
- 301-941-2604
3Objectives
- Describe the AMA PRA credit system guidelines for
Internet Point of Care (PoC) CME from a
providers perspective. - Outline opportunities and challenges for
providers to adapt Internet PoC activities. - Discuss the long term implications for physician
learners and CME providers.
4Focus on Internet Point of Care (PoC)
- Approved March, 2005
- Pilot Study 2000 - 2004
5Physician directed, interactive Internet (Point
of Care) CME
- How to capture, as learning, use of professional
literature at or near PoC - Technology made it possible proliferation of new
information made it necessary - Moving to dynamic, practice situated learning
6Internet Point of Care (PoC) CME
- Individual physician learner-driven learning
- Needs assessment just-in-time not just in case
- How do we establish that physicians have
adequately engaged in this learning activity?
7Internet Point of Care (PoC) CME
- Credit awarded based on engagement with the
content - Physicians must complete the following learning
cycle - describe clinical question
- review clinical sources
- evaluate application to practice
- Does not have to be done at the same time
8Internet Point of Care (PoC) CME
- Awarding Credit
- 0.5 credits per learning cycle
- Based on completion of process not time!
9Internet Point of Care (PoC) CME
- Provider Responsibilities
- Verifying integrity of clinical resources to be
used - Managing access to selected clinical resources
- Verifying physician participation and providing a
mechanism to document completion of learning
cycle - Awarding and recording credit
10What Internet Point of Care is NOT
- Internet PoC is not unstructured online
research. It is intended to answer a specific
clinical question within a verified resource
database. - Internet PoC is not sources pulled by a
librarian (or other staff) and provided to
physicians. Must be completed by the physician
online.
11Internet Point of Care (PoC) CME
- Opportunities
- Not just large providers smaller providers can
provide a portal -
- Data gathering easy to go beyond AMA guidelines
- Personal learning portfolios?
- Link to patient outcomes?
12Internet Point of Care (PoC) CMEExample Medical
City Hospital (Dallas, TX)
- Introduction Page outlining
- Learning objectives
- Needs assessment information
- Databases to be used
- Directions for access and claiming credit
- Disclosure information
- Required CME language
13Internet Point of Care (PoC) CMEExample Medical
City Hospital (Dallas, TX)
- Describe the Clinical Question
- What is the clinical topic/question? (open
field) - Is this question related to (check all that
apply) - - A rare condition - A condition not managed
recently - A diagnostic dilemma - A need for
new clinical information - A controversial
clinical issue - Other (specify)
14Internet Point of Care (PoC) CMEExample Medical
City Hospital (Dallas, TX)
- Review Clinical Sources
- How would you define your findings?
- - Found clinical information that answered my
question- Found clinical information that was
related, but did not directly answer my
question- Did not find any clinical information
that addressed my question- Other (specify) - Please type in 1-3 citations of the most
relevant articles and the name of the database
used (open field)
15Internet Point of Care (PoC) CMEExample Medical
City Hospital (Dallas, TX)
- Describe application of findings to practice (1)
- Describe the application of your findings to
your practice (Check all that apply and complete
the statement) - - Reinforced my clinical decision to (open
field) -
- - Confirmed a diagnosis of (open field)
-
- - Reviewed the condition of (open field)
- - Applied new clinical guidelines to management
of (open field)
16Internet Point of Care (PoC) CMEExample Medical
City Hospital (Dallas, TX)
- Describe application of findings to practice (2)
- Describe the application of your findings to
your practice (Check all that apply and complete
the statement) - - Changed course of management (please detail
below) - - Unable to find clinical information that
addressed my question - - Other (specify)
17Internet Point of Care (PoC) CMEExample Medical
City Hospital (Dallas, TX)
- Also included
- Overall evaluation questions (meeting objectives)
- Questions related to barriers for finding
information - Beyond the guidelines - combination of checklists
and open fields - Allows for physician reflection and detailed
information - Allows for standardized data across physicians
18Internet Point of Care (PoC) CMEExample Medical
City Hospital (Dallas, TX)
- To visit this example
- www.medicalcityhospital.com
- Go to physicians, CME, Internet Point of Care
19Rationale
- Provide consistent, reproducible evidence
- Emphasize patient-oriented evidence over
disease-oriented evidence, but if not there - Are we missing the information (indexing/librarian
failure)? - Is this a missed opportunity to guide the
clinical research agenda?
20Wheres the research?
- Physicians do not seek answers to many of their
questions, often suspecting a lack of usable
information. When they do seek information, they
often cannot find the information they need.
Clinical resource developers could use the
recommendations made by practicing physicians to
provide resources that are more useful for
answering clinical questions. - Answering physicians clinical questions
Obstacles and potential solutions JAMIA, 2005
12217-224
21Other findings
- This sorry state of affairs has historical roots
- Our findings are consistent with those of Gorman
and Helfand,4 who found that only two factors
predicted pursuit of answers the physicians
belief that definitive answer existed and the
urgency of the patients problem. In that study,
only 88 of the 295 questions (30) were pursued,
and 70 of these 88 were answered.
22Other findings
- Why? Reconciling the basic and clinical research
literature to clinician needs is very tough - What are the signs of mesenteric artery
occlusion and do you test for it? She has end
stage CAD with stents in her coronary arteries. I
looked in two textbooks and one Web site. There
was no listing under mesenteric artery or
vascular occlusion. I spent over an hour and
came up with nothing useful.
23Other findings
- We are leaving too much data on the table
- Some recommendations from physicians might be
considered unrealistic by information resource
developers. For example, it world be difficult
for authors to answer practice-generated
questions without a mechanism for collecting such
questions and making them available.
24Other findings
- Needs differ based on type of specialty. In this
case - General internists, general pediatricians, and
family physicians were eligible for the study if
they were younger than 45 years old and practiced
in the eastern third of Iowa. - Vertically integrated specialties (or
subspecialties) may organize in different ways to
deliver value.
25Additional topics to consider product
developers (AAFP)
- Document how evidence is reviewed and updated
- Describe how strength of evidence is evaluated
- Explicitly rate the strength of evidence
- Technologically dependable
26Some questions to think about
- Can we assign PoC credit for more intensive self
assessment modules (multiple hours)? - Any recommended websites for research or can we
use any evidence-based reference/website? - For evidence based medicine (EBM), start with the
American Academy of Family Physicians at
www.aafp.org
27Sample Sources
- PubMed Clinical Queries (ncbi.nih.gov/entrez/query
/static/clinical .shtml) a subset of PubMed
focused on clinically relevant papers - National Library of Medicines (NLM) Hazardous
Substances Database - National Guideline Clearinghouse
(www.guideline.gov) developed by the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) - MerckMedicus (www.merckmedicus.com) non-branded,
broad educational resource for physicians - ClinicalEvidence (www.clinicalevidence.com)
British Medical Journal's (BMJ) compendium of
evidence based medicine (requires subscription)
28Sample Sources
- Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
(www.cochrane.org) abstracts only - Genetics Resources on the Web/GROW
(www.geneticsresources.org) - Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality/AHRQ
(www.ahrq.gov) Clinical Guidelines and Evidence
Reports - Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) for Primary Care
and Internal Medicine (http//ebm.bmjjournals.com)
BMJ developed abstracts are free, but full
text access requires a subscription - CDC Wonder (http//wonder.cdc.gov) a single
point of access to a wide variety of reports and
public health data - Thanks also to RSI Reactive
29Whither Internet PoC?
- Independently developed content, distributed on
proprietary platforms? - Or do we focus on the mechanisms for access to
and retrieval from existing sources? - And lets talk a moment about content, our shared
responsibility
30Some other things to think about
- Ease of use!
- Evaluate barriers (log on requirements, speed of
system, access nodes, etc.) - Doesnt have to be complex, improve over time
31What I still believe
- Internet PoC learning should integrate
physicians overall performance (EMR!) - New models for physician learning already
complement existing modes of CME (live
activities, etc.) - Will help meet the demand for transparent,
documented and accountable CME
32A closing thought, still
- Internet Point of Care should give us CME that
is authoritative and adaptively accessible. - Robert Galbraith, MD
- NBME
33Thank You!Charles E. Willis, Vice
PresidentEducation and TrainingAmerican
Gastroenterological Association (AGA)
Institutecwillis_at_gastro.org301-941-2604