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Barriers and Enhancers to the EBM process. 12 th June, 2007. Jane McHugh, Information Specialist Dr Klara Brunnhuber, Clinical Editor BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. Agenda. EBM process: From unrecognised information need to evidence-based practice Enhancers and barriers to EBM process
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Barriers and Enhancersto the EBM process 12th June, 2007 Jane McHugh, Information Specialist Dr Klara Brunnhuber, Clinical Editor BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
Agenda • EBM process: From unrecognised information need to evidence-based practice • Enhancers and barriers to EBM process • Role of clinical librarian services within EBM process
Methods • In-depth data analysis of the papers identified by M. Dawes’ systematic review* • Recording barriers and enhancers to the EBM process • Grouping barriers / enhancers by SPECK concepts • Mapping clinical librarian services to the EBM process *Dawes M. Sampson U. (2003) Knowledge management in clinical practice: a systematic review of information seeking behaviour in physicians. Int J Med Inform. 71: 9-15.
Results based on Dawes’s review: Number of studies included Quantitative analysis in review
Enhancers and barriers to the EBM process No. of studies Based on Dawes’s review (2003) E: Enhancer; B: Barrier; *: Perceived enhancer/barrier
RESULTS POSSIBLE ENHANCERS POSSIBLE BARRIERS Step 0: • S: Exposure to questions/ • problems (from seniors, • colleagues, training, • exams) • E: Journal subscription • S: Working in isolation • C: Existing thinking • patterns • C: Loosing face in front of • juniors • C: Lack of time Step 1:
RESULTS POSSIBLE BARRIERS POSSIBLE ENHANCERS Step 1: • C: Forgetfulness • C: Lack of time • C: Lack of skill to • formulate questions Step 2:
POSSIBLE BARRIERS POSSIBLE ENHANCERS • S: Dealing with many specialty areas • S: Lack of access to resources • S: Lack of time due to urgency of • decision • S: Messy office • P: Question too general • P: Lack of urgency • C: Lack of time • C: Lack of search skills • C: Lack of knowledge about resources • C: Forgetfulness • C: Belief that resource won’t deliver • answer • C: Belief that answer won’t change • patient management • C: Belief that no answer exists • C: Perceived effort • C: Hesitation to contact colleagues • C: Lack of interest • C: Lack of energy due to long working • hours • C: Lack of computer literacy • K: Huge volume of literature • K: Cost of resources • P: Urgency of need • E: Search skill training • C: Belief that answer exists • C: Belief that patient will be harmed • without answer • C: Belief that patient expects answer • C: Belief that patient expects doctor to • know answer • C: Fear of malpractice liability • C: Recently trained, with academic • appointment, involved in research, • member of journal club • K: Access to full text articles* • K: Easy, fast access to reliable, • trustworthy, familiar, convenient, • searchable extensive/complete • resource/service • K: Ideal resource*: Immediate, easily • accessible, concise, organised, high- • quality information, answering specific • questions, usable in patient’s presence, • more than just a list of references Step 2: Step 3: also covered by Dawes’s review
POSSIBLE BARRIERS POSSIBLE ENHANCERS • E: Slow/inconvenient IT systems • C: Lack of appraisal skills • C: Lack of time • C: Time available*: 10-30min • for research questions; less • for clinical questions • C: Difficulty finding relevant • material • K: Resource out of date/of low • quality • K: Lack of access to good images • K: Technical language of • material • K: Inadequate indexing of • material • K: Answer not concise enough to • address point-of-care • questions • K: Answer delayed Step 3: • E: Info on resources from • colleagues/training • E: Critical appraisal training • K: High quality, credible, • easily understandable • resource, providing all • necessary detail Step 4:
POSSIBLE BARRIERS POSSIBLE ENHANCERS Step 4: • E: Answer confirmed by • additional literature search • E: Opportunity to discuss • answer with colleagues/ • someone who has applied • it/at journal club • C: Reported results compare • well with experience • K: Peer-reviewed article • S: Inadequate local resources • C: Existing working/thinking • patterns and habits Step 5:
Current clinical librarian services • Encouraging questioning/learning culture and a greater willingness to check out the evidence as part of everyday patient care • Involvement in journal clubs, delivering EBM skills • Current awareness services / bulletins • Attending ward rounds/clinical meetings • Training how to formulate questions • Question Answering Services • Training how to search • Question Answering Services • Collating and grading results against evidence hierarchy • Setting up databases of answered clinical questions • Training how to appraise articles • Requesting feed back on provided services • Following up on service’s impact on clinical care
Next steps • Update of Dawes’ SR (special focus on electronic knowledge resources) • Additional search covering the last EBM step (putting EBM into clinical practice)
Thank you • Jane McHugh jmchugh@bmjgroup.com • Klara Brunnhuber kbrunnhuber@bmjgroup.com