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Why providing information for evidence based decision making by nurses is a bad idea…. Carl Thompson UK Department of Health, Senior Research Fellow. What is he talking about…?. That the context for EBN means that information (no matter how good the quality) is never enough
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Why providing information for evidence based decision making by nurses is a bad idea… Carl Thompson UK Department of Health, Senior Research Fellow
What is he talking about…? • That the context for EBN means that information (no matter how good the quality) is never enough • 10 information myths that illustrate the reality of EB decision making • Nurses vary enormously in their handling of even experientially-generated, relevant, knowledge – so what hope for research info. • That using evidence involves costs, benefits, trade-offs: it’s a PURCHASING decision made by members of a COMMUNITY (of practice)
context (errors, information, combination and unknowns) Patient Safety and decision making
context (research ) • 2 multi site case studies (1997 – 2002) • theoretically sampled • 200 in depth interviews • 400 hours observation (decision making and information use in action) • 4000 documents audited • Q methodological modelling (242 nurses) • Social judgement modelling (critical care and community nurses, 2003 – pres) • “Think aloud” and video Thompson et al. 1999, 2000, 2001 2002, 2004, in press
context (information to knowledge) 10001000110011010… if X then Y and Z
Context (learning) Behavioural trends, Changes and Incremental modification Repetition Activity Behaviour Practice Training Observation experience Learning Observable…unobservable…observable Hilguard, Marquis 1961
Typology* of decision related uncertainty • Intervention/effectiveness • Targeting • Timing • Prevention • Referral • Communication (risks and benefits) • SDO • Assessment • Dx • Information seeking • Experiential, understanding or hermeneutic * Kappa 0.82 Thompson et al. IJNS 2004 Thompson et al. 2000, 2001 2002, 2004; McCaughan et al. 2002
The information response • 270 hours of PCO observation ‘external’ resources used: • 19/115 patients (district nurses); • 57/224 patients (practice nurses and nurse practitioners); • 15/55 patients (health visitors). • 75% of these for pharmaceutical information needs. • 85% of ‘external sources’ other colleagues or PCO members otherwise BNF (x2 on-line) • 180 hours of acute care observation (circa 1080 decisions) only 2 forms of text based information used (local guidelines x 4 and BNF x 50)
The 10 information for nurse decision making ‘myths’ • Only objective information is valuable • More information is always better • Information can be transmitted without context • Information can only be acquired from formal sources • Relevant information exists for every need • Every information need has a solution • Information can always be made accessible • Functional units of information fit the functional units of individuals • Time and space don’t matter • External information and internal reality can be united without conflict
only objective information is valuable • Normatively – possibly • Descriptively - untrue
more information is better • Problem is making sense of existing information rather than adding to it.
objective information can be transmitted out of context • Nurses reject ‘acontextual’ information sources in favour of context-rich advice • Lack the appraisal skills to inject context into information
information can only be acquired from formal sources • Information is ‘differences that makes a difference’ (Bateson 1979) • Differences that made a difference (with the exception of drug-reference material) are informally located
relevant information exists for every need • Nurses don’t recognise (or cannot verbalise) information needs • Satisficing • [over] confidence quickly acquired (Urquhart 1999).
every information need situation has a solution • Information seeking = transforming need into workable format • unfitness for purpose = negative feedback
information can always be made accessible • Physical sense = yes • Intellectual/cognitive = no
functional units of information sources fit the needs of individuals • EBN functional units = systems, synopses, syntheses and studies (Haynes 2001) • Nurses functional units = colleague advice, ideas and consultation
time and space ignored + Time, Visibility Of process - good Task Structure poor ‘pure’ scientific experiment System aided judgement Peer aided judgement intuition (cf. Hammond, Hamm, Dowie 1963-2002) Mode of decision making intuition Analysis
conflict free connections between external information and internal reality • Defensiveness and conflict • We simply do not know!
What is SJT? ‘ecology’
High school College graduate
Purchasing behaviour Post purchase feelings Felt need Pre-purchase activity Purchase decision Use behaviour Post use evaluation Info need recognition Info search behaviour Evaluation of Info alternatives Use behaviour Information behaviour Kotler 1967; Case 2002
knowledge knowledge • Lives in the human act of knowing • Is tacit as well as explicit • Social as well as individual • Is dynamic