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Precision diagnosis: a view of the clinical decision support systems (CDSS) landscape through the lens of critical care.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Belard, A; Buchman, T; Forsberg, J; Potter, BK; Dente, CJ; Kirk, A; Elster, E
Published in: J Clin Monit Comput
April 2017

Improving diagnosis and treatment depends on clinical monitoring and computing. Clinical decision support systems (CDSS) have been in existence for over 50 years. While the literature points to positive impacts on quality and patient safety, outcomes, and the avoidance of medical errors, technical and regulatory challenges continue to retard their rate of integration into clinical care processes and thus delay the refinement of diagnoses towards personalized care. We conducted a systematic review of pertinent articles in the MEDLINE, US Department of Health and Human Services, Agency for Health Research and Quality, and US Food and Drug Administration databases, using a Boolean approach to combine terms germane to the discussion (clinical decision support, tools, systems, critical care, trauma, outcome, cost savings, NSQIP, APACHE, SOFA, ICU, and diagnostics). References were selected on the basis of both temporal and thematic relevance, and subsequently aggregated around four distinct themes: the uses of CDSS in the critical and surgical care settings, clinical insertion challenges, utilization leading to cost-savings, and regulatory concerns. Precision diagnosis is the accurate and timely explanation of each patient's health problem and further requires communication of that explanation to patients and surrogate decision-makers. Both accuracy and timeliness are essential to critical care, yet computed decision support systems (CDSS) are scarce. The limitation arises from the technical complexity associated with integrating and filtering large data sets from diverse sources. Provider mistrust and resistance coupled with the absence of clear guidance from regulatory bodies further retard acceptance of CDSS. While challenges to develop and deploy CDSS are substantial, the clinical, quality, and economic impacts warrant the effort, especially in disciplines requiring complex decision-making, such as critical and surgical care. Improving diagnosis in health care requires accumulation, validation and transformation of data into actionable information. The aggregate of those processes-CDSS-is currently primitive. Despite technical and regulatory challenges, the apparent clinical and economic utilities of CDSS must lead to greater engagement. These tools play the key role in realizing the vision of a more 'personalized medicine', one characterized by individualized precision diagnosis rather than population-based risk-stratification.

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Published In

J Clin Monit Comput

DOI

EISSN

1573-2614

Publication Date

April 2017

Volume

31

Issue

2

Start / End Page

261 / 271

Location

Netherlands

Related Subject Headings

  • United States Food and Drug Administration
  • United States
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Risk
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Precision Medicine
  • Patient Safety
  • Monitoring, Physiologic
  • Monitoring, Intraoperative
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Belard, A., Buchman, T., Forsberg, J., Potter, B. K., Dente, C. J., Kirk, A., & Elster, E. (2017). Precision diagnosis: a view of the clinical decision support systems (CDSS) landscape through the lens of critical care. J Clin Monit Comput, 31(2), 261–271. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10877-016-9849-1
Belard, Arnaud, Timothy Buchman, Jonathan Forsberg, Benjamin K. Potter, Christopher J. Dente, Allan Kirk, and Eric Elster. “Precision diagnosis: a view of the clinical decision support systems (CDSS) landscape through the lens of critical care.J Clin Monit Comput 31, no. 2 (April 2017): 261–71. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10877-016-9849-1.
Belard A, Buchman T, Forsberg J, Potter BK, Dente CJ, Kirk A, et al. Precision diagnosis: a view of the clinical decision support systems (CDSS) landscape through the lens of critical care. J Clin Monit Comput. 2017 Apr;31(2):261–71.
Belard, Arnaud, et al. “Precision diagnosis: a view of the clinical decision support systems (CDSS) landscape through the lens of critical care.J Clin Monit Comput, vol. 31, no. 2, Apr. 2017, pp. 261–71. Pubmed, doi:10.1007/s10877-016-9849-1.
Belard A, Buchman T, Forsberg J, Potter BK, Dente CJ, Kirk A, Elster E. Precision diagnosis: a view of the clinical decision support systems (CDSS) landscape through the lens of critical care. J Clin Monit Comput. 2017 Apr;31(2):261–271.
Journal cover image

Published In

J Clin Monit Comput

DOI

EISSN

1573-2614

Publication Date

April 2017

Volume

31

Issue

2

Start / End Page

261 / 271

Location

Netherlands

Related Subject Headings

  • United States Food and Drug Administration
  • United States
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Risk
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Precision Medicine
  • Patient Safety
  • Monitoring, Physiologic
  • Monitoring, Intraoperative