Title: Where now for Primary Care ICT
1Where now for Primary Care ICT
- Simon de Lusignan
- Primary Care Informatics - SGHMS
- www.gpinformatics.org
2Primary Care Informaticshttp//www.gpinformatics.
org
- Information knowledge in the consulting room
- Data Quality
- Knowledge Management
- Telemonitoring
3Overview
- Two themes
- Primary Care Professionals need access to the
knowledge base. - Clinicians need to learn from their clinical data
- Two sub-plots
- Careers in Primary Care Informatics?
- Does knowledge management provide the unifying
theme?
4And a caveat
- Nobody wants to be a GP right now
5Introduction
- The future for Primary care ICT is to accelerate
learning - By access to knowledge bases
- Primary Care National electronic library for
Health (NeLH-PC) as an exemplar - By learning from your own clinical data the
standard of medicine practiced - PCDQ (Primary Care Data Quality) Program as an
exemplar
6Background
- The knowledge base is expanding
- Types of knowledge
- How clinician learn
- What learning strategies are effective
7Expanding knowledge base
- In relation to the professional knowledge base,
NHS professionals cannot possibly retain in their
heads all current and emerging knowledge about
the work they do. - Healthcare is an international business and the
knowledge base constantly changes and grows. - Information for Health
8Types of Knowledge
- Two types of knowledge
- Explicit
- what is expressed and recorded
- EBM is a special type of formalised explicit
knowledge - Tacit
- Held within us experiential, intuition,
- Subdivided into mental models of the world and
technical element." - Polyani (1966,) Takeuchi and Nonaka (1995.)
9NeLH Epistemology of knowledge
- Simplified terminology, "knowledge" and "knowhow"
- Knowledge is applied to explicit knowledge -
principally highly formalised I.e. EBM. - Knowhow the technical element of tacit knowledge
- the "know how to do it sort." Often how to
apply the evidence-based. - NeLH Knowledge Management Resource.
- URL http//www.nelh.nhs.uk/knowledge_management.a
sp
10Starting point
- The information retrieval systems available in
General Practice are relatively difficult to
access during consultations - ..emergent technologies like NeLH offer
opportunities - we advocate a system whereby professional
organisations such as RCGP might contribute to
the process. - Sullivan F et al. An information retrieval
service. BJGP 1999491003-7.
11Shift towards learner-centred education
- Old think
- Passively listening to lectures
- Educator decides topic
- Read a journal or text book
- Errors should be forgotten / denied
- New think
- Actively participate in learning
- You decide the topic
- Problem solving, simulated cases
- Errors are a learning experience
Wyatt JC. Clinical Knowledge in the
Information Age London RSM, 2001
12New think is not universally accepted
- Implementation strategies preferred included
- small group
- continuing education with a specialist
(urologist) and a general practitioner as a
facilitator, - lectures and patient education materials.
- Of least interest were
- Internet access,
- interactive computer systems,
- distance education modules.
- Puech M, et al. Local implementation of national
guidelines What do - general practitioners suggest will work? Int J
Qual Health Care 199810(4)339-43
13Reviews of the evidence point towards certain
themes
- Our data show some evidence that interactive
CME sessions that that enhance participant
activity and provide the opportunity to practice
skills can effect change in professional practice
and, on occasion,health care outcomes. - Based on a small number of well-conducted
trials, didactic sessions do not appear to be
effective in changing physician performance. - Davis D et al. Impact of formal continuing
medical education do continuing education
activities change physician behavior or health
care outcomes? JAMA 1999 Sep 1282(9)867-74
14Emerging evidence supports complex interventions
- the complex educational intervention
exemplified the best form of knowledge
translation (the integration of knowledge into
practice), moving the practitioner from - awareness of new guidelines
- to agreement with the guidelines and
- finally to adoption and adherence,
- following well-defined patterns of adoption and
based on principles of adult learning applied to
CME.
Davis D. Clinical practice guidelines and the
translation of knowledge the science of
continuing medical education. CMAJ 2000 163
(10 )1278-9
15Method to move primary care on.
- Access to the knowledge base
- Learning from own clinical data
16NeLH-PC
17NeLH-PC access to knowledge
- Signposts to key papers modernisation agenda
- Produced daily
- Personalisation - My NeLH-PC
- Searchable electronic index - Metadata
- Special EBM search engine
- Three tier searching Guidelines, Summary of
EBM, Medline clinical queries - Flat hierarchical structure
- Moving from GUI to flexible database driven
interface - Appropriate re-authoring
18Part of NHS strategy
- Specialised web sites - Virtual Branch Libraries
- will focus on mental health, cancer and primary
care. - Building the Information Core
- The public and NHS staff will be able to access
information on local care services and how best
to use them through nhs.uk and evidence-based
information and clinical guidelines through the
National electronic Library for Health (NeLH). - The NHS Plan
19NeLH-PC usage
- Usage end of morning, all afternoon
- UK working hours
- Tue, Wed, Thur busiest days
- .nhs.uk and .ac.uk largest users
- Over 750k hits May 2002
- Most used parts
- Site index search (NeLH-PC Directory)
- EBM Search
- Personalisation
- Cross Indexing
20NeLH-PC Usage (2)
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23Development help needed...
- Knowledge officers to build collections, or use
our index cards - Passive or Interactive
- Address the meta-data issue
- Integration with clinical systems and existing
information sources - e.g - BNF - Clinical evidence
24PCDQ Learning from your own clinical data
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35LOCAL Feedback
- Laminated summary for PHCT
- Read Coding aids
- Brief local Read Code training
- Local query set
36All sorts of gratuitous comments about the
practice data, for the people who didnt make the
meeting. All sorts of rude remarks and
suggestions (only joking!)
37Clinical Governance Cycle
38A model for Clinical Governance
On-line paperless
EBM Portal
Improved Patient Care
Data recording
Theme III PCDQ
Data extraction
Feedback
Data pooling
39Summary
40Summary
- Is learning how to exploit whats there more
important than more technology? - What role for primary care informaticians?
- Is accelerating learning (knowledge management) a
important as ICT?
41www.nelh-pc.nhs.ukwww.pcdq.orgwww.gpinformatic
s.org
- Thanks for listening
- slusigna_at_sghms.ac.uk