Clinical decision support tools for paediatric sepsis in resource-poor settings: an international qualitative study

Author:

Jimenez-Zambrano Andrea,Ritger Carly,Rebull Margaret,Wiens Matthew O,Kabajaasi Olive,Jaramillo-Bustamante Juan Camilo,Argent Andrew CORCID,Kissoon Niranjan,Schlapbach Luregn J,Sorce Lauren R,Watson R Scott,Dorsey Holliman Brooke,Sanchez-Pinto Lazaro N,Bennett Tellen DORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveNew paediatric sepsis criteria are being developed by an international task force. However, it remains unknown what type of clinical decision support (CDS) tools will be most useful for dissemination of those criteria in resource-poor settings. We sought to design effective CDS tools by identifying the paediatric sepsis-related decisional needs of multidisciplinary clinicians and health system administrators in resource-poor settings.DesignSemistructured qualitative focus groups and interviews with 35 clinicians (8 nurses, 27 physicians) and 5 administrators at health systems that regularly provide care for children with sepsis, April–May 2022.SettingHealth systems in Africa, Asia and Latin America, where sepsis has a large impact on child health and healthcare resources may be limited.ParticipantsParticipants had a mean age of 45 years, a mean of 15 years of experience, and were 45% female.ResultsEmergent themes were related to the decisional needs of clinicians caring for children with sepsis and to the needs of health system administrators as they make decisions about which CDS tools to implement. Themes included variation across regions and institutions in infectious aetiologies of sepsis and available clinical resources, the need for CDS tools to be flexible and customisable in order for implementation to be successful, and proposed features and format of an ideal paediatric sepsis CDS tool.ConclusionFindings from this study will directly contribute to the design and implementation of CDS tools to increase the uptake and impact of the new paediatric sepsis criteria in resource-poor settings.

Funder

NIH

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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