HIV-ASSIST is an online decision support tool created by Johns Hopkins faculty that utilizes standard patient variables, and provides treatment recommendations and tailored educational content to assist providers learn HIV treatment principles and support decision-making. The research goal is to determine the difference in percentage of appropriate antiretroviral therapy (ART) selection (based upon a reference standard of HIV experts and guidelines) for a set of hypothetical patient scenarios, comparing a group of trainees with access to current national DHHS guidelines (control), and a group using HIV-ASSIST (intervention) in addition to guidelines. The investigators proposed a randomized study design, in which an electronic survey/questionnaire with 10 HIV case vignettes are presented to study participants. Medical and nursing students and internal medicine residents will be eligible to participate. Participants providing informed consent will be randomized to receiving access to either online Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) HIV guidelines, or the HIV-ASSIST online tool to support participants' decision making. Participants will be asked to indicate participants' ART regimen of choice for each case scenario. The proportion of appropriate ART selections will be evaluated comparing the intervention and control arms. The investigators will additionally report the time required for trainees to complete ART selections for the presented clinical vignettes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
138
HIV-ASSIST is an online interactive patient-based tool that allows for individualized HIV treatment recommendations through the synthesis of patient-specific factors with existing guidelines and evidence.
This is the Department of Health and Human Services HIV/AIDS Treatment Guidelines.
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Proportion of appropriate ARV selections
Median score (out of 100%) on survey of 10 standardized case scenarios, as scored in comparison to a reference panel of HIV experts.
Time frame: Up to one hour
Time to ARV selection
Time in minutes to ARV selection for standardized case scenarios between trainees using HIV-ASSIST and those using the DHHS guidelines.
Time frame: Up to one hour
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