This study is designed to test the helpfulness of a diagnostic tool, SimulConsult, when clinicians are diagnosing pediatric rheumatic diseases. Trainees and nurse practitioners will use the software or not use it, and their differential diagnoses will be compared to those of attending physicians in the same clinical encounter, and then to definitive diagnoses weeks later after testing, if one is reached.
The study aims to assess improvement in the clinical performance of trainees evaluating patients with a suspected rheumatologic disorder. The Intervention is the use of Diagnostic Decision Support Software (DDSS) already available as a Boston Children's Hospital resource. * Main objective: To assess if the use of the DDSS by trainees and nurse practitioners can improve their diagnostic performance in developing a differential diagnosis and plan in real clinical use. (Studies have shown in prior research that the use of the DDSS does so for case vignettes, lowering diagnostic errors of trainees by 75%). The study will compare how closely the differential diagnosis and plan of the trainees and nurse practitioners approximate those of their senior Pediatric Rheumatology attending physician colleagues. * Secondary objective: To assess how frequently the differential diagnosis of the trainees and nurse practitioners includes the definitive diagnosis by doing a manual chart review weeks after the visit. (Studies have shown in prior research that if the definitive diagnosis is in the initial differential diagnosis, the right tests get ordered, and diagnostic errors are avoided.) The design is a parallel one, comparing subjects (trainees and nurse practitioners) using the DDSS (Intervention Arm) to subjects who do not use the DDSS (Control Arm). In both study arms, subjects may use all other traditional resources. Arm assignment will be by patient case rather than trainee / nurse practitioner to reduce variation due to each subject's different capabilities (years of training and familiarity with pediatric rheumatology).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
15
Comparing use of decision support group (intervention group) to use only of common literature (control group) among pediatric trainees diagnosing patients with possible rheumatologic disorder
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Performance against Gold Standard: Presence of Gold standard #1 diagnosis in trainee list
The study will compare the trainee's differential diagnosis and workup plan to those of the attending physician seeing the same patient. The Attending is considered at this stage as the "gold standard" and we aim to answer the question "how well does a trainee with a DDSS (and traditional resources) approximate an experienced, specialist Attending vs. a trainee with access only to more traditional resources?".
Time frame: 1 day
Performance against definitive diagnosis: Presence of definitive diagnosis in trainee list
The study will do a manual chart review of the cases to find the definitive diagnosis (where available) to measure the frequency with which the definitive diagnosis was in the trainee's initial DDx.
Time frame: 6 weeks
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