Accessibility, usability, and usefulness of a Web-based clinical decision support tool to enhance provider–patient communication around Self-management TO Prevent (STOP) Stroke

Author:

Anderson Jane A1,Godwin Kyler M1,Saleem Jason J2,Russell Scott3,Robinson Joshua J4,Kimmel Barbara5

Affiliation:

1. VA Health Services Research & Development - Houston Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety, Michael E. Debark VAMC, Baylor College of Medicine, USA

2. VA Health Services Research & Development - Center on Implementing Evidence Based Practice, Richard Roudebush VAMC, Regenstrief Institute, Inc., USA

3. Health Services Research & Development - Center on Implementing Evidence Based Practice, Richard L. Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center, USA

4. US Department of Veterans Affairs, USA

5. The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, USA

Abstract

This article reports redesign strategies identified to create a Web-based user-interface for the Self-management TO Prevent (STOP) Stroke Tool. Members of a Stroke Quality Improvement Network (N = 12) viewed a visualization video of a proposed prototype and provided feedback on implementation barriers/facilitators. Stroke-care providers (N = 10) tested the Web-based prototype in think-aloud sessions of simulated clinic visits. Participants’ dialogues were coded into themes. Access to comprehensive information and the automated features/systematized processes were the primary accessibility and usability facilitator themes. The need for training, time to complete the tool, and computer-centric care were identified as possible usability barriers. Patient accountability, reminders for best practice, goal-focused care, and communication/counseling themes indicate that the STOP Stroke Tool supports the paradigm of patient-centered care. The STOP Stroke Tool was found to prompt clinicians on secondary stroke-prevention clinical-practice guidelines, facilitate comprehensive documentation of evidence-based care, and support clinicians in providing patient-centered care through the shared decision-making process that occurred while using the action-planning/goal-setting feature of the tool.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Informatics

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