4.7 Article

Clinician Perspectives on Clinical Decision Support for Familial Hypercholesterolemia

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERSONALIZED MEDICINE
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jpm13060929

Keywords

Clinical decision support; CDS; familial hypercholesterolemia; implementation science; stakeholder engagement; electronic health record

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Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH) is greatly underestimated in the United States. Clinical decision support (CDS) can be effective in improving FH detection when integrated into clinical workflows. The deployment of FH CDS at an academic medical center has received positive feedback from clinicians and has the potential to enhance early diagnosis and patient management.
Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH) is underdiagnosed in the United States. Clinical decision support (CDS) could increase FH detection once implemented in clinical workflows. We deployed CDS for FH at an academic medical center and sought clinician insights using an implementation survey. In November 2020, the FH CDS was deployed in the electronic health record at all Mayo Clinic sites in two formats: a best practice advisory (BPA) and an in-basket alert. Over three months, 104 clinicians participated in the survey (response rate 11.1%). Most clinicians (81%) agreed that CDS implementation was a good option for identifying FH patients; 78% recognized the importance of implementing the tool in practice, and 72% agreed it would improve early diagnosis of FH. In comparing the two alert formats, clinicians found the in-basket alert more acceptable (p = 0.036) and more feasible (p = 0.042) than the BPA. Overall, clinicians favored implementing the FH CDS in clinical practice and provided feedback that led to iterative refinement of the tool. Such a tool can potentially increase FH detection and optimize patient management.

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