How do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?

This thesis presents a series of studies about general medical practitioners’ patient management decisions in depression and the role of the clinical guideline within these.  The goal of the research was to identify the factors that influence their prescribing and to investigate how guideline use co...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smith, Liz
Published: University of Aberdeen 2002
Subjects:
616
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.252143
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-2521432015-03-19T07:50:22ZHow do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?Smith, Liz2002This thesis presents a series of studies about general medical practitioners’ patient management decisions in depression and the role of the clinical guideline within these.  The goal of the research was to identify the factors that influence their prescribing and to investigate how guideline use could be increased so as to promote clinical effectiveness.  A lens model study found that GPs tend to over prescribe compared with the guidelines and place much more emphasis on patients’ reports of thoughts of suicide and sleep disturbance than the guideline. Although GPs’ judgement data were well described by regression models, a simple fast and frugal model of decision-making explained the judgement data equally well.  A cluster analysis was carried out on the resulting GPs’ decision policies and 3 clusters emerged which could be differentiated by the size of practice they worked in.  GPs in the larger practices had decision policies, which were more like those of guideline recommendations.  GPs were found to have good self-insight in to their decision-making when a policy recognition task was used.  A further analysis found that GPs in one area in England prescribed at a greater rate than those in the Grampian region of Scotland and decision policies showed that patient treatment preference had less influence on the English GPs’ decisions. The results from these quantitative studies were explored further by using in-depth interviews with GPs.  A number of factors which help to explain why the GPs are sometimes prevented from following guideline recommendations and fulfilling patient treatment wishes and why changing behaviour in order for it to be more compliant with guideline recommendations it so difficult.616General practitionersUniversity of Aberdeenhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.252143Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 616
General practitioners
spellingShingle 616
General practitioners
Smith, Liz
How do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?
description This thesis presents a series of studies about general medical practitioners’ patient management decisions in depression and the role of the clinical guideline within these.  The goal of the research was to identify the factors that influence their prescribing and to investigate how guideline use could be increased so as to promote clinical effectiveness.  A lens model study found that GPs tend to over prescribe compared with the guidelines and place much more emphasis on patients’ reports of thoughts of suicide and sleep disturbance than the guideline. Although GPs’ judgement data were well described by regression models, a simple fast and frugal model of decision-making explained the judgement data equally well.  A cluster analysis was carried out on the resulting GPs’ decision policies and 3 clusters emerged which could be differentiated by the size of practice they worked in.  GPs in the larger practices had decision policies, which were more like those of guideline recommendations.  GPs were found to have good self-insight in to their decision-making when a policy recognition task was used.  A further analysis found that GPs in one area in England prescribed at a greater rate than those in the Grampian region of Scotland and decision policies showed that patient treatment preference had less influence on the English GPs’ decisions. The results from these quantitative studies were explored further by using in-depth interviews with GPs.  A number of factors which help to explain why the GPs are sometimes prevented from following guideline recommendations and fulfilling patient treatment wishes and why changing behaviour in order for it to be more compliant with guideline recommendations it so difficult.
author Smith, Liz
author_facet Smith, Liz
author_sort Smith, Liz
title How do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?
title_short How do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?
title_full How do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?
title_fullStr How do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?
title_full_unstemmed How do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?
title_sort how do clinicians use guidelines in decision making?
publisher University of Aberdeen
publishDate 2002
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.252143
work_keys_str_mv AT smithliz howdocliniciansuseguidelinesindecisionmaking
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