Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Human Factors
Date Submitted: Mar 8, 2021
Date Accepted: Jul 25, 2021
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
Shared Decision Making for Drug Interactions: Design and Usability of an Application for Warfarin and Non-steroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs
ABSTRACT
Background:
Exposure to life-threatening drug-drug interactions (DDIs) occurs despite the widespread use of clinical decision support. The DDI between warfarin and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs is common and potentially life-threatening. Patients can play a critical role in preventing harm from DDIs; however, the current model for DDI decision-making is clinician-centric.
Objective:
To design and study the usability of DDInteract, a tool to support shared decision making (SDM) between a patient and provider for the DDI between warfarin and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
Methods:
We used an SDM framework and user-centered design methods to guide the design and usability of DDInteract – an SDM electronic health record (EHR) app to prevent harm from clinically significant DDIs. The design involved iterative prototypes, qualitative feedback from stakeholders, and a heuristic evaluation. The usability evaluation included patients and clinicians. Patients participated in a simulated SDM discussion using clinical vignettes. Clinicians were asked to complete eight tasks using DDInteract and to assess the tool using a survey adapted from the System Usability Scale.
Results:
The designed DDInteract prototype includes the following features: a patient-specific risk profile, dynamic risk icon array, patient education section, and treatment decision tree. Four patients and eleven clinicians participated in the usability study. After an SDM session where patients and clinicians review the tool concurrently, patients generally favored pain treatments with less risk of gastrointestinal bleeding. Clinicians successfully completed the tasks with a mean (standard deviation) of 144 (74) seconds and rated the usability of DDInteract as 4.32 (0.52) out of 5.
Conclusions:
This study expands the use of SDM to DDIs. The next steps are to determine if DDInteract can improve shared decision-making quality and to implement it across health systems using interoperable technology.
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