Title: Traditional Expert-Based Information Delivery Systems
1Traditional Expert-Based Information Delivery
Systems
- Using an Expert, Being an Expert
2Roles of Experts
- Consultation
- CME
- Review articles
- Practice guidelines
- Decision analysis
3Using an Expert/Being an Expert
- Definition of an expert
- Subspecialist or primary care clinician with
special interest - Anyone/anything you go to for an answer to a
question
4Using an Expert/Being an Expert
- Never ask the barber whether you need a haircut
- So many specialists fall into the habit of
looking where the light is -- that is, offering
solutions only in territory familiar to them. . .
Wonderful examples exist of otherwise excellent
researchers who are unable and unwilling to
recognize evidence contrary to their beliefs.
5Usefulness Score
- Work Low
- Significant potential for usefulness
- Relevance Varies
- Validity Expert dependent
- If either relevance or validity is zero,
usefulness is zero
6Types of Experts
- Content Expert
- Clinical Scientist
- YODA
7Content Expert
- Experienced, particularly diagnosis and
procedures, not necessarily therapy - Not trained in clinical epidemiology (validity)
- Traditional education favors DOEs (relevance)
- May not be current, may rely on anecdotes
- Risky extrapolation Information is only as
current as the last consultation
8Clinical Disagreement Between/Within Experts
- Same film disagree 29 of time
- Previous read disagree with self 20 of time
- Studied with venograms, fundi, MRI, angiography,
mammograms, pathology (melanoma diagnosis) - March 97 Bandolier on the Web Histology as Art
Appreciation
9Never ask a barber . . .
- Chalmers Recommendation highly correlated with
training and source of income - Management of acute GI bleed
- Surgeons surgery- 50 conservative- 15
- Internists surgery- 15 conservative- 50
10Clinical Scientist
- Good at evaluating evidence up-to-date, dont
have to be content experts - Separation of therapeutics
- Medical Librarian, PharmD
11(No Transcript)
12YODA Your Own Data Analyzer
- Content expert and clinical scientist
- Consider POEMs first, even if this information
conflicts with DOEs or clinical experience - When POEMs not available, use best DOEs with an
open mind - Demonstrate appropriate validity assessments
- Not to be confused with YUCKs
13YUCK
- YOUR
- UNSUBSTANTIATED
- CLINICAL
- KNOW IT ALL
14Experts gone wrong YUCKs
15YUCK
- Your Unsubstantiated Clinical Know-it-all
- Maladaptive
- Rigid, Dogmatic
- All personality types, but people who see things
in Red and Green can fall into the YUCK trap
16The Golden Question Thats interesting . . . Is
there any evidence that . . . ?
17If its not a valid POEM, its just not
necessarily so
18Making the Most of a CME Presentation
19Dilberts Take on CME
20(No Transcript)
21Continuing Medical Education
- People remember 90 of what they do, 75 of what
they say, but only 10 of what they hear - How to make the 10 count
22Do We Get Something From CME?
23Is post-test performance improved? (DOE)
- YES
- Beware Chinese-Dinner Memory Dysfunction
24Are patient outcomes improved? (POEM)
- No . . .Multiple RCTs have failed to find a
benefit from traditional lecture format (passive) - Maybe . . . with active (hands-on) workshops
combined with close follow-up
25Usefulness
- Validity Depends on the speaker
- Relevance Depends on POEMDOE ratio
- Work Higher than it seems
- NBA analogy (only last two minutes count)
- Tracking down validity of new POEMs
26Role of the Speaker
- Present a good mix of POEMs highlighted by
clinically relevant DOEs - Augment POEMs with clinical experience
- Identify Level of Evidence (LOE)for listener
27Role of the Listener
- Identify, before the talk begins
- What you want to learn
- What are the POEMs you need to know?
- Actively evaluate information (CME worksheet)
- When a change-inducing POEM is presented,
validate - By questioning the speaker
- By cross-checking with other sources
28Identifying Common POEMS
- Will this information have a direct bearing on
the health of my patients (is it something they
care about)? - Is the problem common to my practice?
- Is the intervention feasible?
- If true, will it require me to change my current
practice?
29Newer Models for CME
- Practice-based small group CME
- Educational prescriptions
- Point of care Sources
- Team-based learning
- Audience response systems
- CME worksheet
- Social media