Implementation and clinical utility of a Computer-Aided Risk Score for Mortality (CARM): a qualitative study

Author:

Dyson JudithORCID,McCrorie Carolyn,Benn Jonathan,Richardson Donald,Marsh Claire,Bowskill Gill,Double Keith,Gallagher Jean,Faisal MuhammadORCID,Mohammed Mohammed A

Abstract

ObjectivesThe Computer-Aided Risk Score for Mortality (CARM) estimates the risk of in-hospital mortality following acute admission to the hospital by automatically amalgamating physiological measures, blood tests, gender, age and COVID-19 status. Our aims were to implement the score with a small group of practitioners and understand their first-hand experience of interacting with the score in situ.DesignPilot implementation evaluation study involving qualitative interviews.SettingThis study was conducted in one of the two National Health Service hospital trusts in the North of England in which the score was developed.ParticipantsMedical, older person and ICU/anaesthetic consultants and specialist grade registrars (n=116) and critical outreach nurses (n=7) were given access to CARM. Nine interviews were conducted in total, with eight doctors and one critical care outreach nurse.InterventionsParticipants were given access to the CARM score, visible after login to the patients’ electronic record, along with information about the development and intended use of the score.ResultsFour themes and 14 subthemes emerged from reflexive thematic analysis: (1) current use (including support or challenge clinical judgement and decision making, communicating risk of mortality and professional curiosity); (2) barriers and facilitators to use (including litigation, resource needs, perception of the evidence base, strengths and limitations), (3) implementation support needs (including roll-out and integration, access, training and education); and (4) recommendations for development (including presentation and functionality and potential additional data). Barriers and facilitators to use, and recommendations for development featured highly across most interviews.ConclusionOur in situ evaluation of the pilot implementation of CARM demonstrated its scope in supporting clinical decision making and communicating risk of mortality between clinical colleagues and with service users. It suggested to us barriers to implementation of the score. Our findings may support those seeking to develop, implement or improve the adoption of risk scores.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Yorkshire and Humber Patient Safety Translational Research Centre (NIHR Yorkshire and Humber PSTRC).

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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